The term for a placeholder made up of small boxes called cells is a grid.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
Cells got their unique name from an English physicist named Robert Hooke. He discovered cells when he was using one the the first light microscopes to look at thin slices of plant tissue. As he continued to look at the plant tissue, one in particular caught his eye. This was a sample of cork, he thought the cork looked like it was made up of thousands of tiny little chambers, which he called cells. He called them this because they reminded him of the tiny rooms in a monestary, which were also called cells.
Robert Hooke first viewed cells with a microscope. He began calling them cells because they resembled the cells in which monks lived and worked.
Organelles.
Robert Hooke called cells "little boxes" in the 1600's
They are called CELLS .
The boxes are cells and together they form a row.
The cell was discovered by Robert Hooke who had been looking at cork under a microscope. He noticed little "boxes" which he called cells. Infact, the "cells" were part of the membrane of cork cells. It wasn't until the 1830s that cytoplasm was discovered. Before this cell organelles were thought to float around in the cell. Cytoplasm is the "jelly-like" substance that contains all membrane bound organelles. I do not remember the year Robert Hooke discovered cells.
The term for a placeholder made up of small boxes called cells is a grid.
Cells
Robert Hooke.
He called them "jail cells". He also called them "animacules".
The individual boxes of a table are called cells. Each cell can contain text, numbers, or other types of data. Cells are organized in rows and columns to create the structure of the table.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
Robert Hooke discovered the cell in the mid 1600's by looking at a piece of cork in a microscope and noticed it was made up of boxes that looked like prison cells, which is where the name comes from.Alexander Fleming
cells? do you mean electrons?