Single celled, bacteria .. etc ...
An example of something that is neither plant nor animal is a fungus. Fungi belong to their own kingdom and are distinct from both plants and animals. They obtain nutrients through absorption rather than photosynthesis.
Virus is neither a plant nor an animal it is actually in between living and non-living organisms. but it is been classified under botany.
Neither plants nor animals can survive without water. Water is essential for all living organisms to carry out basic functions such as metabolism, growth, and reproduction. Without water, both plants and animals would quickly perish.
Algae are neither plant nor animal, but are closer to plants in terms of their appearance. They photosynthesise, like plants, using the sun's energy to create their own 'food' inside their cells. They do not consume other organisms.
Bacteria, and yeast cells, as well as protists
Tree's are neither vertebrates nor invertebrates, as those are distinctions used in the animal kingdom, and plants are not animals.
Plants are neither invertebrate nor vertebrate; they belong to a separate kingdom called Plantae. Invertebrates and vertebrates refer to classifications within the animal kingdom, where invertebrates lack a backbone and vertebrates have one. Plants are multicellular organisms that perform photosynthesis and have cell walls made of cellulose.
It belongs to neither kingdom as it is in fact a fungus.
No, the construction "neither...nor" should be used to combine sentences with the same subject and verbs, such as "Neither animals are able to reproduce nor plants are able to survive from the heat."
Humans :P
No. It is neither farmed nor domesticated.
It is under kingdom fungi. Neither plant nor animal.