Yes, the name used to describe a rectangular group of cells in a spreadsheet or table is called a "range." A range can consist of a single cell or multiple cells selected together, often identified by the cell references of the top-left and bottom-right corners (e.g., A1:B10). Ranges are commonly used for data manipulation, calculations, and formatting in applications like Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets.
Robert Hooke used the name cells to describe their shape and pattern.
A group of nerve cells or neurons is called ganglia.
The best way to describe it unambiguously is calling it a rectangle based pyramid.
An adjacent group of cells are known as a range or a block. There is no particular name for a group of non-adjacent cells.
amine group
An organized group of cells is called a tissue
the name given to a group of identical cells is twins
Shape and pattern.
Shape and pattern.
range name
Blastocyst
There is no such group.