This is an odd question. Anything that ISN'T mitosis is a NON-example. So, a sidewalk is not mitosis.
Mitosis. Mitosis ends with two complete cells. Meiosis ends with either four sperm cells or a single egg cell (and the other 3/4 of the material dies and is used as food by what is left). So growing new cells to repair tissue in the body is mitosis, not an example of meiosis.
Mitosis, meiosis, and cytokinesis are non-examples of interphase. These are phases in the cell cycle that do not occur during interphase.
Somatic (non sex) cells undergo mitosis.
Mitosis occurs in Eukaryote cells. An example of a cell that would undergo mitosis would be an injured skin cell. Don't get mitosis confused with meiosis, however. Mitosis is non-sexual reproduction, while Meiosis is sexual.
It is an example of mitosis. The opposite of which is meiosis.
Interphase
All single celled organisms reproduce by mitosis, ie. bacteria.
Mitosis.
No, a thread is not an example of mitosis. Mitosis is a cellular process where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells, while a thread is a thin strand of a material such as cotton, wool, or fiber.
The cell types that remain in a non-dividing stage and do not complete the mitosis process are called "quiescent cells" or "G0 phase cells."
interphase
Well this question is hard. A cell that goes through mitosis would be cells like skin cells, and any other somatic cell. You can also be asking of any practical applications of mitosis. Healing is an example of mitosis, growing is an example of mitosis, even cancer is an example of mitosis.