Both plant and animal cells have a nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and lysosomes. Unique to plant cells are chloroplasts, cell walls, and large central vacuoles. Unique to animal cells are centrioles and small vacuoles. Both types of cells also have ribosomes, cytoplasm, and cell membrane.
Some examples of text structures are cause and effect , problem/solution , and compare and contrast (:. Hope this helped!
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Endoplasmic reticulum - blood vessels cytoplasm - blood Golgi bodies - stomach contractile vacuoles - bladder cell membrane - skin cell wall - bone structure nucleus - brain mitochondria - digestive system
Prokaryotes are older, more basic in function and shape, do not contain a true nucleus or any membrane-bound organelles, unicellular (for the most part - some bacteria have multicellular stages in their life), and consist of bacteria and archae (old bacteria). Eukaryotes can be uni- or multi-cellular, have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, are generally more complex in shape and function, much larger than prokaryotes and evolved later in history. These are just some basic comparisons.
CAUSE THERE GAY
compare and contrast the structure of a vein and artery
Compare and contrast it with what?
The text structure of Last Words of Great Men can be characterized as compare/contrast.
Yes - introduction paragraph, supporting paragraphs, then the concluding paragraph
In an organizational pattern where you compare and contrast subjects as a whole, you typically use a point-by-point structure. This means that you discuss each point of comparison or contrast for both subjects before moving on to the next point. This structure allows for a comprehensive analysis of the similarities and differences between the subjects.
1. Compare 2. Contrast
compare is when you compare two things that are the same and contrast is when you compare two things that are different.
compare and contrast the lakes,wetland and rivers?
compare and contrast between triangles and a trapezoid
Compare.
sequence/chronolgy, problem/solution, question/answer, cause/effect, compare/contrast,