A bacillus does not refer to the shape of a virus. The capsid of a virus is what determines the shape of a virus.
"virus"
Smallpox was a virus.
Rotavirus, Colorado tick fever virus, Rhinovirus, poliovirus, hepetatitis A virus, SARS, Yellow fever virus, West Nile virus, hepatitis C virus, Rubella virus just to mention a few.
A Virus injects his DNA or RNA in the cel or bacteria. The leftover of the virus dies.
The verb for infection is infect.Other verbs are infects, infecting and infected."Be careful they do not infect you"."The virus is infecting everyone"."I have been infected with the ticklish fever".
Yes, the word killed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to kill (kills, killing, killed). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun, for example a killed virus, a killed flame.
The definition according to Google Definitions is: A virus (from the Latin virus meaning toxin or poison) is a small infectious agent that can replicate only inside the cells of other organisms.
As far as a lot of people know, the game is not a virus...many people have played the game and nobody has reported a virus from it. But if you're worried about it, you could scan the file before opening it! Also, take a precaution to prepare yourself...the game, although not a virus as far as many people know, will indeed scare the crap out of you. Anyway, happy Slendering! (If that's a verb. O_O)
active virus
It is a virus. Ebola is a RNA virus.
virus
this are sunday virus, cascade virus, professors virus.
No. Ebola is a virus. No virus is a fungus and no fungus is a virus.
An email virus is a virus that is distributed through emails. It is still a computer virus.
There are about nine types of computer viruses. They include the boot sector virus. the browser hijacker, direct action virus, file infector virus, macro virus, Multipartite Virus, Polymorphic Virus, Resident Virus, and Web Scripting Virus.
What a cell and a virus have in common is the RNA or DNA. The virus can be either a RNA virus or a DNA virus.