archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote
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Archaea and Eukaryote are two different domains from the three domains of life classification. And Prokaryotes belong to two domains: the bacteria and the archaea.
A virus is a microbe and it not a part of the three domains.
There is no answer to this. Bacteria and Archae are two domains, of which the other is Eukarya. These three domains together comprise "life" in general. Both domains are prokaryotes, but they can not be combined into a larger classification without the addition of Eukarya as well.
The three learning domains were theorized by Psychologist Benjamin Bloom in the year of 1956. The cognitive, affective and psychomotor make up the three learning domains.
The three domains of life are the Archaebacteria, Eubacteria and Eukarya. The six kingdoms of life fall into one of these domains.
There are so many domains of life there are three
The three major domains are childhood, married life and spending retired life in isolated room.
The three domains of life all represent some really (and I mean REALLY) ancient forms of life. So the answer would be 'all of them.'
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Eukarya, Archaea, Bacteria Eukarya covers plants and animals Archaea covers a group of unicellular microorganisms Bacterica covers a large group of unicellular microorganisms that have no nucleus
Archaea and Eukaryote are two different domains from the three domains of life classification. And Prokaryotes belong to two domains: the bacteria and the archaea.
Eubacteria and Archaebacteria
The three-domain system is a biological classification divides cellular life forms into archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote domains.
A virus is a microbe and it not a part of the three domains.
the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya the three domains of living things are bacteria, archea, and eukarya