The cytoplasm is a thick, clear liquid in which the cell's organelles float.
All the contents of the cells of prokaryote organisms (which lack a cell nucleus) are contained within the cytoplasm.
In eukaryotic cells the contents of the cell nucleus are separated from the cytoplasm. It is within the cytoplasm that most cellular activities occur, such as many metabolic pathways including glycolysis, and processes such as cell division.
it's similar
Yes. cytoplasm is found in unicellular.
Ectoplasm is a thin, watery cytoplasm near the plasma membrane of some cells and Endoplasm is a dense cytoplasm found in the interior of many cells
the cytoplasm grows by copying the DNA or RNA and spliting to make 2
Everything inside a cell is not really one thing, but a bunch of parts. The substance that these parts are floating around in is the cytoplasm, but the core or center of a cell is the nucleus. The "powerhouse" of the cell is the mitochondria, etc. There are numerous parts to a cell, and it depends on if you are talking about a plant cell or an animal cell.
it surrounds the nucleus.
It goes through the cytoplasm
Burger king
It helps the nutrients get around the cell.
Cytoplasm is present in both animal and plant cells. All the chemical reactions take place in the cytoplasm.
Its a liquidy substance that surounds everything to protect it
It's where chemical reactions in the cell happen.
it keeps organelles moving and it is a jelly-like substance
The cell membrane does this job.
the job is to hold all the other organelles in place. (think of it as jello holding all the gummies in place)
the cytoplasm is the space in a plant cell surrounding the nucleus
to turn water and carbon die oxide into glucose and oxygen