No, not all living things inhale hydrogen. Most organisms, including humans and animals, primarily inhale oxygen for respiration. Some microorganisms, like certain bacteria, can utilize hydrogen in specific metabolic processes, but it is not a universal requirement for all life forms. Additionally, many organisms rely on other gases or substances for their energy and metabolic needs.
The vast majority of living organisms, and almost all multicellular organisms inhale oxygen duringrespiration.The di-atomic gas oxygen [O2].air
that's easy air
Yes. All living things contain hydrogen.
Carbon and Hydrogen.
All living things have cells, the ability to reproduce, the need for energy, and the ability to grow and develop.
Oxygen, hydrogen and carbon dioxide
They inhale air. What they extract from the air is oxygen.
No.
the answer is carbon,hydrogen,nitrogen, and oxygen. There are really 6: CHNOPS Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur. These are listed in the highest to lowest amounts and they are found in all living things.
The cell is the basic building block of all living things. yes and cells are made of hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen so those are your main building blocks of all living things :)
There are three. Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
oxygen nitrogen carbon dioxide and hydrogen