no
One way would be to try to grow a virus on a sterile Petri dish with media, nothing would grow there. If you grow bacteria that way, you would see growth. Bacterial growth
no it cant
Yes, a virus can grow and replicate within a host organism by hijacking the host's cellular machinery to produce more virus particles.
MRSA is a bacterium, (methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus), not a virus. It does grow, but not like a virus.
Yes
It is nonliving like all viruses and are not effected by sub zero temperatures.
cold temperature
crystals best grow in warm temperatures.
sage does
No. They do not respire, metabolise, grow or excrete.
Most fungi can grow in temperatures ranging from 0°C to 35°C. However, there are some specialized fungi that can survive and grow in colder temperatures, with some species capable of growing at temperatures as low as -20°C.