Virus do not show any cellular organization,so they cannot be classified as a kingdom.
A kingdom-specific infection refers to the manner in which viruses can only infect specific types of host cells. For example, a virus that infects a plant cannot infect a dog or a human, because plants are members of a different kingdom. Likewise, a virus that infects a bacteria (bacteriophages) cannot infect a plant or a bird.
The jury is still out on this one, since the existence of viruses became known after the current taxonomical system of classification was devised. In other words, the virus is not currently included in any of the five kingdoms of living matter, these being Anamalia, Plantae, Fungi, Monera and Protista. Also, it is still uncertain at which point a virus becomes living matter, with some researchers professing that the virus is the link between living and non-living matter. Perhaps a sixth kingdom, if has not already been proposed.
A bacillus does not refer to the shape of a virus. The capsid of a virus is what determines the shape of a virus.
"virus"
No. Virus is a noun.
Virus's do not belong to a Kingdom.
Kingdom Monera
They are not classified into a kingdom as they are not alive.
Kingdom: virus.
Since they are not living, they are not classified and placed in a kingdom.
Dogs and animals and Bush and Lesbian sleep this right is denied in there.
Chickenpox (varicella zoster virus) is a virus.
Yes - they will usually write and detail the reason(s) why your visa has been denied
Virus' are not living - they cannot exist outside a living organism, and therefore cannot be classified in the same way as other organisms
Virus
Nope
ida no