Viruses, bacteria, and so on are called germs, infective agents, microbes, pathogens and so forth.
Pathogens
Pathogens.
Yes there are. They are not called germs however, but bacteria. These bacteria help fight diseases, not cause them.
Bacteria are germs
Ciliated Epithelial Cells have tiny hairs on them. These hairs sweep away any unwanted things, such as bacteria and dust which is trapped in mucus.
Whie Blood cells. they attack the bacteria and germs that enter your body.They are large cells that either produce anti-bodies or engulf microbes, but both result in the destruction of microbes.
"Germs" are made of bacteria and viruses.
pathogens
White Blood Cells make a chemical called Interferon, which white blood cells use to kill bacteria and germs.
Yes there are. They are not called germs however, but bacteria. These bacteria help fight diseases, not cause them.
It's called germs.
Has it's own bacteria called white blood cells and gives you a fever and a runny nose
germs
Bacteria.
Pathogens invade body cells for reproduction. This kills the cells, leading to inflammation as well as an immune response. Fever is the result of body temperature increasing to flush out bacteria. Some germs are worse than others. There is a difference between viruses and bacteria. Virus - a parasite that invades body for survival but is unaffected by antibiotics. It is usually dormant, but awakens in the presence of living tissue. Bacteria - always alive; searches for living tissue in which it reproduces and gains energy.
Bacteria and germs have an opportunity to settle on the left out food. They will try and invade the food and this causes rotting.
Germs are any pathogenic (disease causing) microorganism. These might be bacteria, or they might be other things. Bacterial cells lack a nucleus. Humans are eukaryotes, whereas bacteria are prokaryotes. So people are not bacteria. People are multicellular, whereas germs are generally considered to be single celled orgamisms (most typically bacteria) or viruses. In that sense people are not germs either.
Plasma does not find germs. It transports red and white blood cells, platelets, and nutrients throughout the body. The white blood cells are the cells that attack bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites.
By "germs" I have to assume you mean bacteria. And yes, it is supposed that the first organism was a prokaryotic cell, followed by eukaryotic cells such as plants.