Karyon is noun which refers to the nucleus of a cell.
The letter "y" in eukaryotic is part of the Greek word "karyon" which means "kernel." The kernel refers to the nucleus of eukaryotic cells.
The Latin word is Carina, meaning the keel of a ship. The original translation was 'Nutshell' a reference to the similarities of the shape of ships at the time. This was similar to the Greek word 'Karyon' also meaning a 'nut'
it's means cell nucleus. The centre of a cell.
Examples of words which begin kary- or karyo- include: karyotypical, karyogamic, karyosome.The root word karyo- derives from the Greek word meaning "comb", and is also derived from a similar word, "karyon", meaning "nut" or "kernel".
Prokaryotes are the organisms that do not have nuclei. The word itself says pro = primitive; karyon = nucleus. This means that the DNA is not surrounded by a membrane.
Prokaryotes. That's why they're called prokaryotes- pro-before, karyon-nucleus.
Rugama is the Kikuyu word for the English word stand.
"Dikaryotic" is based on the Greek root word "di-" meaning two, and "karyon" meaning kernel or nucleus. In fungi, dikaryotic refers to the stage of having two distinct haploid nuclei within a single cell, which is important for sexual reproduction.
The word stand has one syllable.
The root word means to stand. stigma is one word that has this root word.
Because it has a proper nucleus. (Eukaryote is greek and means Eu=true,real; Karyon=nucleus)
It does not stand for anything. The word navy is derived from the Latin word navigia meaning ships.