Question | Answer |
Help living creatures with activities of life such as movement, growth, and reproduction. | Cells |
Developed after Robert Hooke invented the microscope in 1665. | Cell Theory |
Made up of one or more cells | Living things |
Basic Unit of life | Cell |
One-celled organisms | Bacteria |
Found by multiplying the powers of the eyepiece and the objective lens | Compound light |
The boundary of the cell that helps control what enters and exits | Cell membrane |
A gelatin like substance containing many chemicals the cell needs | Cytoplasm |
Specialized cell parts that do various jobs within a cell | Organelles |
Contains hereditary material called chromosomes | Nucleus |
Storage organelle for food, water, and wastes | Vacuoles |
Inside this cell part, cellular respiration uses oxygen to convert food energy into a form the cell can use. | Mitochondria |
Waste products of cellular respiration | Carbon Dioxide and water |
Chloroplasts help the cell make its own food through what process? | Photosynthesis |
What organelles do plant cells have that animal cells do not? | Chloroplasts |
The outer support and protective structure of a plant cell | Cell wall |
What 17th Century English physicist gave cells their name? | Robert Hooks |
States that all living things are made up of one or more cells | Cell theory |
Like a non-stop factory | Cell |
The process of when cells divide and grow | Mitosis |
A region in the nucleus that produces tiny cell particles needed in protein synthesis. | Nucleolus |
These contain chemical information that direct the cell's hereditary-related activities. | Chromosomes |
Places where cells store water, food, and other materials. | Vacuoles |
A group of cells working together | Organ system |
What a cell's shape and size is related to | Function |
Group of similar cells that do the same work | Tissue |
Two or more types of tissue working together | Organ |
What kind of plant cells do not contain chloroplasts? | Root cells |