bacterial bakteriye ait

listen to the pronunciation of bacterial bakteriye ait
التركية - الإنجليزية
bacteria
A type, species, or strain of bacterium
plural form of bacterium
One celled microorganisms which do not have a nuclear membrane
A small, single-celled living organism that has DNA and can replicate its own DNA without the help of a host cell Some bacteria are helpful to humans, such as those that live in our stomach and help with digestion, while some are harmful, releasing toxins or poisonous waste products
microorganisms with prokaryotic cell organization (lacking membrane-bounded nucleus and other specialized features); bacteria are also typically much smaller than fungi (molds)
microbiology, plural of bacterium
plural of bacterium Tiny, one-cell organisms of the class Schizomycetes There is a vast assortment of bacteria, including many parasites
A group of prokaryotic single-celled microorganisms that constitute the Bacteria phylogenetic domain Unlike archaea, their cell walls have murein, a peptidoglycan-containing muramic acid Bacteria may have spherical (coccus), rod-like (bacillus), or curved (vibrio, spirillum, or spirochete) bodies They inhabit virtually all environments, including soil, water, organic matter, and the bodies of eukaryotes
Single-celled organisms that multiply by cell division and can cause disease in humans, plants, or animals Examples include anthrax, cholera, plague, tularemia, and Q fever
A group of universally distributed, rigid, essentially unicellular microscopic organisms lacking chlorophyll Some bacteria can aid in pollution control by consuming or breaking down organic matter in sewage or by similarly acting on oil spills or other water pollutants Bacteria in soil, water, or air can also cause human, animal, and plant health problems
Tiny one-celled organisms present throughout the environment Some bacteria cause disease (like diphtheria, tetanus, and typhoid fever)
Invisible single-cell organisms of various forms, some of which can cause infections or disease
Simple single celled prokaryotic organisms Many different species of bacteria exist Some species of bacteria can be pathogenic causing disease in larger more complex organisms Many species of bacteria play a major role in the cycling of nutrients in ecosystems through aerobic and anaerobic decomposition Finally, some species form symbiotic relationships with more complex organisms and help these lifeforms survive in the environment by fixing atmospheric nitrogen
Single-celled microorganisms Bacteria of the coliform group are considered the primary indicators of fecal contamination and are often used to assess water quality
A single-celled organism Bacteria are found throughout nature and can be beneficial or harmful 1
Single-celled microorganisms, about one micrometer (one thousand nanometers) across
Bacteria are very small organisms. Some bacteria can cause disease. Chlorine is added to kill bacteria. very small living things, some of which cause illness or disease virus (bakterion ; because of their shape). Group of microscopic, single-celled organisms that are prokaryotes. They may have spherical, rodlike, or spiral shapes. They inhabit virtually all environments, including soil, water, organic matter, and the bodies of multicellular animals. Different types are distinguished in part by the structure of their cell walls, which is determined by gram stain. Many bacteria swim by means of flagella (see flagellum). The DNA of most bacteria is found in a single circular chromosome and is distributed throughout the cytoplasm rather than contained within a membrane-enclosed nucleus. Though some bacteria can cause food poisoning and infectious diseases in humans, most are harmless and many are beneficial. They are used in various industrial processes, especially in the food industry (e.g., the production of yogurt, cheeses, and pickles). Bacteria are divided into eubacteria and archaebacteria. See also budding bacteria, coliform bacteria, cyanobacteria, denitrifying bacteria, nitrifying bacteria, sheathed bacteria, sulfur bacteria. budding bacteria coliform bacteria denitrifying bacteria nitrifying bacteria sheathed bacteria sulfur bacteria
Single-celled organisms, free-living or parasitic, that break down the wastes and bodies of dead organisms, making their components available for reuse by other organisms
(Plural for bacterium) Tiny microorganisms that reproduce by cell division and usually have a cell wall Bacteria can be shaped like a sphere, rod, or spiral and can be found in virtually any environment
A derisive term for a lowlife or a slob (could be treated as plural or singular)
bacterial bakteriye ait
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