Epithelial Tissue
Cornea
Blood is a fluid connective tissue in the body, not a single cell. It is composed of various types of cells, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, suspended in a liquid matrix called plasma.
Fibers typical of a connective tissue matrix, such as collagen and elastic fibers, are not normally found in blood. Blood primarily consists of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Fibers typically found in connective tissue are found in tissues like tendons, ligaments, and the extracellular matrix of organs.
Red blood cells are the only functional cell with no nucleus
Although the human body has numerous "fluids" in it, blood is the only thing that is considered a "fluid tissue." This means that it is a tissue in the body just like muscle tissue, however it is fluid unlike muscle tissue. The answer is yes.
Cornea
bone
blood
epithelial tissue
Not all, some white blood cells come from lymphoid tissue, especially T-lymphocytes. Plasma proteins in the blood are made in the liver tissue not the myeloid tissue
Blood is called specialized fluid connective tissue because of its composition of blood cells suspended in the blood plasma.
Fat is only adipose tissue. No blood cells here.
Myocardial infarction is the decreased blood flow to cardiac muscle that only injures the tissue.
Actually lymph is also a liquid tissue and part of the immune system.
Capillaries
a valve
Valves?