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What does the cytoplasm of eukaryotes contain?
A.organelles
B.bacteria
C.molecules
D.all the above

2007-01-19 05:46:02 · 4 answers · asked by ck_scorpio40 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

4 answers

You've asked 102 questions and every last one has been for someone to give you homework answers. Do you ever do your own work? Go ahead and report me for hurting your feelings..I couldn't care less. How do you plan to make it in the real world?

2007-01-21 04:24:00 · answer #1 · answered by starikotasukinomiko 6 · 0 0

they have organelles Like the nucleus, golgi apparatus, nucleolous, Smooth and rough enoplasmic reticulums, Ribosomes, and mitochondria(maybe chloroplasts)
Eukaryotes are just living things(plants animals, protozoa) that have a nucleus. They are more complicated than prokaryotes or bacteria with no nucleus. They can be single or multi celled.
The cytoplasm is the empty space in the cells.
, no bacteria I would think though and obviously molecules, what isnt made up of molecules...

2007-01-19 13:53:36 · answer #2 · answered by qwe 3 · 0 1

the cells of eukaryotes (yoo-kar-ee-ohts) do contain nuclei. In addition to a nucleus, a cell membrane, and cytoplasm, most cells of eukaryotes contain dozens of other specialized structures, called organelles, that perform important cellular functions.http://www.shalper.com/cellnotes.htm

So your answer is A.

ss

2007-01-19 13:53:51 · answer #3 · answered by Littlebit 6 · 0 1

A

2007-01-19 13:50:02 · answer #4 · answered by sL85 2 · 0 1

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