Process by which organisms obtain and process food
What is Nutrition?
These two parts are used to carry a microscope
What are the arm and base?
boundary between the cell and its environment
What is the cell membrane?
The largest artery in the body
What is the aorta?
The life activity by which your body gets food and changes it into a usable form
What is Nutrition?
An increase in size and/or number of cells of an organism
What is Growth?
Holds slide on stage
What are clips?
This part of the cell that controls cell activities
What is the nucleus?
The lower left chamber of the heart
What is the left ventricle?
Where digestion begins
What is the oral cavity?
The production of new individuals
What is Reproduction?
Used for rough focus
What is the coarse adjustment?
This part of the cell makes proteins
What are ribosomes?
Carries blood from the heart to the lungs
What is the pulmonary artery?
This is know as the sunshine vitamin
What is vitamin D?
The removal of harmful cellular wastes
What is Excretion?
Rotates objectives
What is the nose piece?
This part of the cell stores water, wastes, and food
What are vacuoles?
The blood vessel that carries oxygen rich blood from the lungs to the heart
What is the pulmonary vein?
The tube that connects the mouth to the stomach
What is the esophagus?
Life process involved with the circulation and absorption of nutrients
What is Transport?
If I look a lowercase e, put it on a slide, and looked at in under the microscope, how would the image appear?
It would appear enlarged, upside down, and backwards
These two parts of the cell are found in plant cells but not animal cells
What are the cell wall and chloroplasts?
These regulate the direction of blood flow in and out of the heart
What are valves?
The muscular action that moves food
What is peristalsis?