yes,it has to be
the cell wall is fully permeable
Plasma membranes are selectively permeable.
No primary cell wall fully permeable.
No, the cell wall is not a permeable membrane. It acts as a rigid structure that provides support and protection to the cell, allowing certain substances to pass through pores, but it is not freely permeable like a membrane.
Plant cells do not have a fully permeable membrane. They have selectively permeable membranes that allow certain substances to pass through while blocking others. This selective permeability helps cells regulate the movement of molecules in and out of the cell.
Cell wall is non living.So it is fully permeable.
The cell wall of the plant cell is fully permeable, The cell wall is a mesh of criss-cross fibres of cellulose glued together. This makes it stiff and quite strong but allows free movement through it so we call it fully permeable
No, they are fully permeable, i.e. liquids and other things can pass through them fully. The cell membrane is what's semi permeable.
yes, it has to be (semi-permeable, to let the cell membrane conrol the process of osmosis(e.g water will go in, but not sugar)
The cell membrane is selectively permeable, allowing only certain molecules to pass through based on size, charge, and other factors. Conversely, the nuclear envelope is fully permeable to molecules of certain sizes.
It is Permeable...
ask a scientest