Yeah, everybody does except the Eubacteria and some Archaea, which is a totally different domain, anyway. The fungi, the plants, and the animals belong to the Domain Eukaryota, meaning we're mostly all made up of multiple cells (but some of us aren't), our cells have nuclei, and we've got membrane bound organelles.
Fungi are not plants.
Fungi are more closely related to animals than plants. They do share some similarity to plants, though. For example, plants and fungi are both able to synthesize the amino acid lysine (animals are not); however, fungi use the AAA pathway, and plants use the DAP pathway. Plants and fungi have cells walls. Plant cell walls are made of cellulose, while fungal cell walls are made of chitin.
they are both unicellular.
Fungi lack chlorophyll which means they can't photosynthesize, and the composition of fungal cell walls are quite different from those of plants.
Fungi and plants are similar in that they both require carbon and energy. Plants meet this need through carbon dioxide and light, while Fungi absorb and metabolize a variety of carbohydrates and insoluble carbohydrates.
Fungi and Protista.
No, there is no such thing as a "necules".However animal cells do have a nucleus.
Fungi obtain nutrients by forming a symbiotic relationship with plants known as mycorrhizae. The fungi help plants absorb water and essential minerals, while the plants provide sugars and other organic compounds to the fungi. This mutually beneficial relationship allows both the fungi and the plants to thrive.
Fungi and plants are both eukaryotic organisms. They also both have cell walls, although the composition of these cell walls differs between the two groups. Additionally, both fungi and plants obtain nutrients through absorption.
Both have cell walls.
i believe they have a root system that makes them both similar
Fungi and bacteria - and both are not plant kingdom