Since viruses aren't currently considered to be fully alive, they are not part of the traditional Kingdom-Phylum-etc. taxonomic rankings.
They use a parallel classification system, which starts at the level of Order and continues down to Species. Please see the related link below.
The common cold virus, or rhinovirus, belongs to the kingdom Viruses. Viruses are not classified under any kingdom in traditional biological classification systems because they are considered acellular and do not fit the criteria for living organisms.
You would find an amoeba in the kingdom Protista. Amoebas are single-celled organisms that have a complex internal structure and are commonly found in freshwater environments.
Bacteriophages belong to the kingdom Virus. They are viruses that specifically infect and replicate within bacteria.
The acronym HPV stands for Human Papilloma Virus. It belongs in the virus kingdom because it is a virus. Like all viruses it is dormant until it enters a cell, and it then takes over the existing cellular machinery to reproduce itself.
If you opened a virus file on your computer, you would typically find malicious code designed to disrupt, damage, or gain unauthorized access to your system. It may be programmed to steal personal information, delete files, or spread to other devices on the network. To protect your computer, it's important to have updated antivirus software and avoid opening suspicious files.
Virus's do not belong to a Kingdom.
no, its a virus
Kingdom Monera
Kingdom: virus.
They are not classified into a kingdom as they are not alive.
You would not find any cells inside a virus. A virus is a small infectious particle and is actually much smaller than most cells. You will find either DNA or RNA in a virus, but never both.
Since they are not living, they are not classified and placed in a kingdom.
Yes, you find cells in everything.
Chickenpox (varicella zoster virus) is a virus.
You would find nucleic acids and core proteins
yes
the right answer is: "Virus"