NO, if you typed "viruses'" (viruses with an apostrophe) it would mean "The viruses' (more than one virus's) something.
Insidious is itself an adjective. Virus is a noun. Insidious may be used as an adjective to describe a sneaky virus.
A virus that causes a cold-like disease
No, the word virus is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a microbe, a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; the pronoun that takes the place of the noun virus is 'it'. Example sentence:The biologist studied the virus to see if it was a variant or a new strain.
Viri could be the genitive singular or the nominative (or vocative) plural of the Latin vir, a male person; or it might be the genitive singular of virus, a slime or snake venom.
what does virus mean
virus is derived from latin virus that mean slimy, poisonous, or toxin.
if you mean shingles virus the answer is yes
well, it depends on what you mean by hidden virus... the best answer i can give you is that it is not a hidden virus based on the fact that it is not a virus.. so yeah
Virus.
If you mean the 'Quarantine' section of an anti-virus software by 'Virus Chest', then after removing it from there, it is permanantly gone....
There does not appear to be a virus by the name of Eco mavro. Assuming that you mean ECHO virus, it is a type of RNA virus that is present in the gastrointestinal tract.
It just means deliberately releasing/spreading a computer virus.
It means you have a virus
HSV stands for herpes simplex virus, the virus that causes genital herpes and cold sores.herpe simplex virus
That the virus definition of your anti-virus software need to be updated.
If you mean the nuclear material, it is located in the capsid of the virus. It can be either RNA or DNA.