Viruses in general are somewhere on the border of "living" and "non-living" - they have some characteristics of living beings (notably, they can reproduce), but they lack others (such as a metabolism).
It can't because it is NOT a living organism.
nonliving
Non-living
All are made from matter.
both the living and nonliving components of the biosphere.
Mostly No. A rhinovirus is a type of virus. A virus does not completely fit the accepted definition of a living entity.
It can't because it is NOT a living organism.
the earth is nonliving but has living organisms on it
nonliving
it is nonliving
nonliving
nonliving
nonliving...
Iancelet is nonliving.
steak is nonliving
well, I think you meant "are protein living or nonliving". and they are nonliving
Nonliving