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Following are some characteristic which are common in all living beings: 1:All living beings are made of cells, whether they are as small as unicellular organisms or as large as a whale. 2: All living beings have to meet death. ... What Separates Living Organisms From Non-living Things?
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www.blurtit.com/q260633.html
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Cellular organization ordered complexity sensitivity (response to stimuli) growth, development and reproduction energy utilization homeostasis evolutionary adaption That's pretty simplified but it's when what you learn when you learn the ba...
http://www.blurtit.com/q975957.html
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It is generally agreed that all living things have a few features in common: they all respond to their environments, they all grow and develop, they all use energy, they all can reproduce, they all maintain a steady chemical balance inside themselves (homeostasis), they are all composed of cells, and all populations...
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/gen01/gen01810.htm
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If something follows one or just a few of the rules listed above, it does not necessarily mean that it is living. To be considered alive, an object must exhibit all of the characteristics of living things.
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www.usoe.k12.ut.us/curr/science/sciber00/7th/classify/l...
www.usoe.k12.ut.us/curr/science/sciber00/7th/classify/living/2.htm
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Energy goes into living things in the form of light ,or chemicals ... What characteristics are shared by all living things? ... Water is universal and the most common chemical...
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www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios104/lecturenotes01.htm
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This section contains material that is common scientific belief. Early life left no fossil evidence. ... To replicate, the DNA must be alive. When it replicates, it passes its life physically and directly to its offspring. All living things today are alive by virtue of the DNA living in each cell in their bodies.
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www.onelife.com/onelife2.html
www.onelife.com/onelife2.html
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All life begins. Living things all have a moment at which they become "alive." That beginning of life marks the first point on the circle of life. Each family of living things has its own life cycle. Some organisms, like some fast plants, are born, mature, and die rapidly. ... Even more common, however,
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www.fi.edu/tfi/units/life/living/living.html
www.fi.edu/tfi/units/life/living/living.html
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