Bacteria are a type of microbe.
Dirt is the generic name for a mixture of organic and inorganic materials, as such it is not a microbe. However, dirt frequently contains bacteria as a constituent.
It depends. In the US, dirt often refers to what most people call earth or soil. A lot of household dust consists of dead human [or pet] cells: bits of skin that has flaked off, hair and so on. That is not [yet] soil. Outdoors, they would be the same except that dust would be extremely dry.In the UK there is less of a distinction between dust and dirt - the main distinction being the dryness of dust..
Both "covered with dirt" and "covered in dirt" are commonly used phrases. The difference is subtle - "covered with dirt" implies that the object has some dirt on it, while "covered in dirt" suggests that the object is completely surrounded by dirt. Both are correct and can be used interchangeably in most cases.
Dirty is the adjective of dirt.
The dirt on the ground was wet and muddy after the rainstorm.
The children played in the dirt after a day of heavy rain.
because of the genetic structure of the cells inside the dirt
Hair cells.
They don't the only way to keep dirt from going into your throat is to breathe through your nose where your nose hair and mucus provide traps for dirt. Yout throat cells have tiny hairs which trap and prevent dust and dirt from going into your body, you also have these cells in your nose too.
to clear away mucus and dirt
dead skin cells and dirt
inside your lungs there are some cells called cillia they are little hairs that sway side to side hat remove dust and dirt from your lungs. when you smoke you are killing those cells thus all the dirt stays in your lungs making it hard for you to breath
They don't the only way to keep dirt from going into your throat is to breathe through your nose where your nose hair and mucus provide traps for dirt. Yout throat cells have tiny hairs which trap and prevent dust and dirt from going into your body, you also have these cells in your nose too.
Skin cells make our skin and skin protects us from dirt and germs getting directly into our body, and cells allow us to be here for if we didnt have cells we wouldn't exist
Ciliated cells help to clear dust and dirt from your airways with tiny hairs.
Dirt and bacteria are trapped and swallowed at the back of the throat by cilia cells.
They occur on the surface of specialised cells and are called "cilia".
Dirt is not a living organism and therefore does not have cells, whether unicellular or multicellular. Dirt is a complex mixture of minerals, organic matter, water, air, and living organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms. These living organisms found in dirt are multicellular, but dirt itself is not considered to be multicellular or unicellular.