Cilia
No. There are only hairs inside of the nose, which serve to clean the air that you inhale - breathing through your nose is better for you because the air is cleaned - dirt is trapped in the mucous and hair in your nose. If you breathe through your mouth, there is very little to clean the air.
Cilla
The "hairs" on a paramecium are called cilia.
Pseudostratified ciliated columnar are the thread like hairs that line the esophagus. They catch dirt or debris that might enter into your throat when you breathe. That is the first thing to become affected (paralyzed), when someone smokes cigarettes.
Paramecia move with the little hairs around there body called cilia.
You can pluck the little hairs
Yes because it has to sense the insect to be able to catch it.
A group of hairs is called a hank or a tress.
The little hairs on a plant's stem are called trichomes. Trichomes can serve various functions such as protecting the plant from herbivores, reducing water loss through transpiration, or helping with light absorption.
The gatekeeper of the esophagus is called the lower esophageal sphincter (LES). It is a muscular ring at the junction of the esophagus and stomach that helps to prevent stomach acid from flowing back into the esophagus.
Those hairs are called mustache.
the tiny hairs are called CILIA