An analogy to the flagellum is a motorized boat engine. Just as a boat engine propels the vessel through water using a rotating propeller, a flagellum moves microorganisms through liquid environments by whipping or rotating. Both systems convert energy into motion, allowing for movement and navigation in their respective mediums.
A flagellum is a long, thread-like organelle used by many microscopic organisms for locomotion and feeding.
No flagella do not reproduce.
The word flagellum has commonly been used to describe a whip. The lesser used definition is in biology which is for a long threadlike appendage that functions as an organ.
flagellum
I don't think there is one. An analogy is a special kind of abstract relationship. An antonym, or opposite, means something at the farthest possible extreme away--something at the opposite end of the continuum. But something either is an analogy or is not (and that may even be a matter of interpretation or opinion). There is no meaning to the idea of being the farthest possible thing from an analogy.
flagellum is like a fishes tail it helps a cell get places
Flagellum
"Flagellum: Propel Your Curiosity!"
No, Flagellum is singular, flagellais plural. The word flagellum is derived from Latin, meaning whip
The flagellum was a whip used by Egyptians
flagellum=tails that help organism move In the reproductive system, sperm have flagellum
Short flagellum is concerned with substrate attachment.
The filament in a bacterial flagellum is made of a protein called flagellin. Flagellin forms the helical structure of the flagellum filament, providing the bacterium with motility.
suck my balls
Flagella is the plural form of flagellum.
No. Only some bacteria have a flagellum.
Flagella is already the plural of flagellum.