In reference to cells, the answer is cilia.
Eukaryotic cells use flagella and cilia. Prokaryotes use those and pili.
Cilia are little hair-like structures that are used in movement. They beat in an upward movement. Flagela is also used for movement.
That would be Pilli. Also Flagellum is used for movement in cells but ressembles more like a tail.
Flagella
flagellum
Cilia
cilia
pilli
How the language is used.......is the answer
The term used to describe the rate of an object's movement is speed or velocity. Velocity is the same as speed but also measures direction.
velocity
"speed" or "the speed"
vestigial
cilia
euglena That's wrong ^^
flagellum
No. Cilia in humans are small hairs like the ones in the nose used to filter germs. Cilia in microbes is a hairlike structure used for movement.
vovuoles
Flagella
There are two types or hairlike structures that microorganisms use for movement. They are cilia (singular: cilium) and flagella (singular: flagellum). Usually microorganisms have cilia (more than one cilium) and flagellum (usually only one).
Cilia is the hairlike projections used for locomotion and obtaining food.
Movement
Flagella
Skeletal structure i.e the skeleton...the human frame work
pseudopod