growth
adaptability
reproduction
Yes, an organism typically has all the characteristics of a living thing, such as the ability to grow, reproduce, respond to stimuli, and maintain homeostasis.
One of the characteristics of a living is that living things can reproduce. Pencils cannot reproduce so they must be nonliving
Biologists determine whether a thing is living or nonliving by a list of characteristics. These characteristics include the ability to reproduce, the ability to eat, the ability to grow and the ability to excrete waste.
yes because it is a vegetables
no, fire is not "alive". First of all, the definition of "life" is interesting. It appears you read a book that says there are 5 characteristics, while in my college bio book it says 7 characteristics, so you can see it is already arbitrary. I will use the 7 characteristics in my book just b/c I have it with me and I don't know what your "5 characteristics" are. Note, for something to be "alive" it basically has to have all these qualities. Things that have some of these qualities but not all are not alive (such as viruses). 1. Are hightly organized compared to natural inanimate objects. (Fire fails) 2. Display homeostasis, maintaining a relatively constant internal environment. (Fire fails) 3. Reproduce themselves. (Arguable, but I'd say fire passes) 4. Grow and Develop from simple beginnings. (Fire passes) 5. Take energy and matter from the environment and transform it. (Hmm, I'd say fire passes but then again fire IS energy so maybe not...) 6. Respond to stimuli (I'd say fire fails) 7. Show adaptation to their environment (I donno lol) So as you can see since fire does not pass all it is not alive. Of course almost everything passes at least one of these things, for example try asking these 7 things about a rock!
It can have some of the seven characteristics but not all of them
Yes, an organism typically has all the characteristics of a living thing, such as the ability to grow, reproduce, respond to stimuli, and maintain homeostasis.
No. The characteristics of living things are: Movement, respiration, sense, growth, reproduction, energy and nutrition. You need to have all of them to be considered alive. e.g. A car moves, takes in air, uses energy and some have sensors that can sense their surroundings but you cannot say a car is alive.
fire is a nonliving thing because it does not show all the characteristics of a living thing....
by the all living
No. A living thing has to have exactly all of the following five characteristics of a living thing to be living:Responsive to the environmentBeing able to reproduceUsing energyGrowing and DevelopingBeing made of cells
Yes, trees have all the characteristics of a living thing. They are composed of cells, grow and develop, reproduce, respond to stimuli, and require nutrients and energy to survive. Additionally, trees can adapt to their environment and maintain homeostasis.
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is a molecule found in living organisms that codes for their genetic information. It carries instructions for the growth, development, functioning, and reproduction of all living things. DNA is unique to each individual and is responsible for determining an organism's traits and characteristics.
Viruses have some, but not all, of the characteristics of living things.
a living thing must be able to replicate its DNA using its own cellular components. Viruses need a host's machinery to replicate its DNA/RNA so it is not living. Prions and plasmids are also incabable of this and are also unliving. ------ There are several characteristics that are typical for a living being; some things considered "non-living" (like viruses, or a fire) have some of those characteristics, but not all of them. Some of these characteristics are that a living being can reproduce (so can a virus, or a fire!); that it has an organized structure; that it has a metabolism (it converts substances into other substances); some living beings can move (but some, like plants and sponges, usually don't).
There are 7 things that all living things do: # Take in and use gases # Produce waste # Reproduce # Grow # Respond to stimuli # Take in and use energy # Move
All living things share a common ancestry.