You may be thinking of viruses. They are not technically living because they are not made of cells, and have none of the interior structure of cells, but they do have DNA or RNA. Viruses high-jack living cells by inserting their own genetic material and forcing the cell to become a virus factory until it bursts and releases the new viruses. Viruses do not reproduce by themselves. They have to take over a living cell to do that in a process called replication.
Viruses, although their reproduction is limited to that of the host cell.
The best answer is nothing
But you can argue for simple crystals if the conditions are just right.
There are no non-living things that can reproduce
Only living things can reproduce so far as our scientific knowledge has determined. Rocks and light and stars and metal cannot reproduce.
A mule is not able to reproduce.
nonliving
yes
Yes
no. fire is nonliving because it is not made of cells and is 100% predictable when interacting. It also has no reason or instinct.
If it is sessile (does not move, not motile), it can be mistaken to be nonliving.
Nothing...Nonliving-DeadDon't moveDon't reproduceDon't eat anything
A house is a nonliving thing. A book is a nonliving thing. A road is a nonliving thing.
The sun is nonliving.
nonliving...
nonliving
Bikes are not a nonliving thing because it does not have any organs.
living thing has a cell and a nonliving thing doesn't
living thing has a cell and a nonliving thing doesn't
fire is a nonliving thing because it does not show all the characteristics of a living thing....
stupid guestion but no it is not nonliving
The sun is nonliving.
viruses are nonliving things. but they need living things to reproduces. so live