Germs can live on anything. If by harmful bacteria, then yes. They can.
Even inanimate objects.
up to six hours.
Inanimate objects.
sterilization
Inanimate objects can be categorized into three main groups: natural objects, man-made objects, and abstract objects. Natural objects include elements like rocks, trees, and water, which exist in nature without human intervention. Man-made objects encompass items created by humans, such as furniture, tools, and vehicles. Abstract objects refer to concepts or ideas that do not have a physical presence, like numbers, thoughts, or emotions.
Germs can stay alive in air for up to 48 hours after leaving an infected person or animal. Some germs can live up to a week on surfaces they infect. It is best to keep hands washed, and surfaces sterile to kill germs.
up to six hours.
Cameras do not live in the desert. They are inanimate objects and not living organisms.
Mountains do not 'live' anywhere. They are inanimate objects. They can occur in deserts, however.
Conversations with Inanimate Objects was created in 2005.
no. theyre inanimate. theyre not alive.
The answer is fomites.Fomites are inanimate objects, such as a book, a carpet, money, door handle and so on, which is capable of transferring germs from one person to another.This noun is pronounced "FOM-i-teez".
Machines are inanimate. Machines do not eat, sleep, rest, breathe, and they do not have a heart beat. Machines are just objects, inanimate objects for the use of humans.
Animate objects are things that are alive like animals and plants, inanimate objects aren't alive, like books and paper.
We are objects and we do. However its very unlikely inanimate objects do.
inanimate objects were never alive dead objects were once alive.
No, they are inanimate objects.
No, inanimate objects cannot possess things. Possession implies ownership or control, which requires some form of agency or consciousness that inanimate objects do not have.