The spelling is "thermos" (still a trademark name Thermos), a vacuum-insulated flask.
The suffix of "spell" is " -el."
The noun for spell is "spelling," As in, "What is the correct spelling for this word?"
Some prefixes that can be added to the word "spell" include mis-, re-, and un-. For example, "misspell" means to spell incorrectly, "respell" means to spell again, and "unspell" means to undo or reverse a spell.
thirteenyou spell it thirteen.you spell it thirteen.
"How do you spell it in French?" is "Comment ça s'écrit en français?"
Thermus aquaticus = =
The scientific name of thermophiles is typically derived from the genus to which they belong, such as Thermus or Thermococcus. For example, the scientific name for a thermophile in the genus Thermus might be Thermus aquaticus.
Thermus aquaticus Thermus thermophilus Chloroflexus aurantiacus Pyrodictium abyssi
orangeatitus is the main disease.
Sir James Dewar
Both have scientific and commercial uses 1.1) Thermus produces Taq polymerase 1.2) Dinococcus used to clean up radioactive contamination
Thermophiles bacteria: Thermus aquaticos
In yellowstone national park in 1969 by freeze and brock
Characteristics seen in a mushroom but not in thermus aquaticus include a cap and stipe, or stem. The major part of a mushroom is concealed beneath soil or within decomposing materials, such as rotting trees or leaves.
A mushroom is a eukaryote and a thermos aquaticus is a prokaryote
C.M Menendez has written: 'Producation of the thermostable dna polymerbase from thermus aquaticus in escherichia coli'
Jorge Rivera-Cifuentes has written: 'Purification and properties of the prolyl-tRNA synthetase from 'thermus aquaticus''