First ... human cells come in many sizes, the female egg cell is so large that it's almost visible to the naked eye.
Second ... plant cells tend to be larger than animal cells (by a factor of about 10).
Animal cells are bigger I think.
Red blood cell
Eukaryotic cells are much larger than prokaryotic cells.
An elephant's cells are not larger than human cells, depending on what type of cells we are identifying. The reason an elephant is so much larger than a human is because an elephant has many more cells than a human. Even though elephants are bigger in size, it does not effect the size of its cells.
An ovum cell is typically much larger than a somatic (body) cell. The ovum cell is the largest cell in the human body, visible to the naked eye, while somatic cells are much smaller and vary in size depending on the specific cell type.
yes
No, they are not. The surface areas of cell must increase exponentially in order to compensate for the large increase in cell volume, so to solve this problem multicellular organisms simply have more cells as opposed to larger cells.
The answer is tissues, they are way bigger than cells but smaller than those big organs
Egg cells are the biggest: you could only fit one on the head of a pin. But I'm not sure if a sperm cell is bigger than a red blood cell or vice versa.
Bacteria are in general ranges from 0.5 to 5µm (micrometer) in length. blood cells ranges from 7-12 µm. so blood cells are bigger than Bacterium.
no actually the vacuole is bigger in the plant cell
The adult is bigger so it needs more cells than a baby.