The first person to use the word "cells" in a biological context was Robert Hooke in the 17th century. He used the term to describe the small compartments he observed in a slice of cork under a microscope, likening them to the cells in a monastery.
Robert Hooke :)
Robert Hooke
robert hooke
Wyatt courouble
some guy named anton
The first person to use the word geography was Eratosthenes. Eratosthenes was a Greek scholar and chief librarian of the Library of Alexandria. He invented geography including most of the terminology still in use.
The first basemen on the padres was the first person to bat in the next inning.
It is customary to write essays in the third person, unless they are of a personal nature, in which case use the first person.
It works for all three, but it depends on the way you use it.
gametes are first cells of life. Two gametes fertilize and make a single cell.
Zygote is the scientific term for the name of the first cell formed by two gamete cells...
It's unkwown as to who was the first person to say the word mandatory. There are many words that are part of our lexicon that originated in a certain book or printing. However, it's vary rare to say who exactly was the first person to use the word or phrase.
I believe it was Democritus.
No, the pronoun 'your' is the secondperson possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun as belonging to the person spoken to.
Another way to use a person's ideas but not word for word is to paraphrase.