IT is a unicellular.
A fungi is a multi-cell but can be a single cell
Yeasts fall under the kingdom Fungi. They don't need sunlight to grow. There are two major classifications of yeasts and they are the Saccharomycotina (true yeasts) and the Taphrinomycotina Schizosaccharomycetes (fission yeasts). Most yeast are single-celled, but they sometimes 'glue'together to form chains and become multi-cellular.
Fungi can be both single-celled (yeasts) and multicellular (mushrooms, molds).
Yeast is a single-celled fungi.
Fungi can be either multicellular or unicellular. Most fungi are multicellular, such as mushrooms and molds. However, some fungi, like yeasts, are unicellular.
mulitcellular
A fungi is a multi-cell but can be a single cell
No, tigers are multi-cellular eukaryotes.
Yeasts fall under the kingdom Fungi. They don't need sunlight to grow. There are two major classifications of yeasts and they are the Saccharomycotina (true yeasts) and the Taphrinomycotina Schizosaccharomycetes (fission yeasts). Most yeast are single-celled, but they sometimes 'glue'together to form chains and become multi-cellular.
Fungi can be both single-celled (yeasts) and multicellular (mushrooms, molds).
They are multi-cellular.
Nothing. There is no such thing as a MULTI CELLULAR cell. All cells are single units.
Single-cell
Yeast is a single-celled fungi.
Fungi can be either multicellular or unicellular. Most fungi are multicellular, such as mushrooms and molds. However, some fungi, like yeasts, are unicellular.
Bacteria are uni-cellular, meaning they are all single celled organisms.
Multi-cellular I think although I am not 100% sure. Please do not take my word for it. Hope this helps...