On the other hand, many cells attain a considerable size, and run occasionally to several inches in diameter, as do certain kinds of rhizopods among the unicellular protists (such as the radiolaria and thalamophora).
The ovum then consists of as many cells as there are nuclei in the tread.
Metazoa: the higher or later animals, made up of many cells.
From the position of the central body with regard to the other parts it seems probable that it has a high physiological importance as a centre of movement; but it is lacking in many cells.
In the study of certain of the tissues and organs of the toad we have learned that the body of this animal is composed of many cells, thousands and thousands of these microscopic structural units being combined to form the whole toad.
The cell cannot be said to be composed of organs, because the word organ, as it is commonly used in the study of an animal, is understood to mean a part of the animal body which is composed of many cells.
The body of Hydra, like the body of the toad, is composed of many cells, but these cells are of only a few different kinds; that is, show but little differentiation.
As will be learned in the next exercise, the bodies of all other animals except the Protozoa, the simplest animals, are composed of many cells.
These qualities can only arise by the regular co-operation of many cells.
A large number of the characters that arise in an organism during its development are due to the combination of many cells.
It is upon the qualities of these ultimate particles that he makes depend the qualities of the corresponding parts of the adult, the parts that are cells as well as the parts built of many cells.
All the members of the other great branches of the animal kingdom and the higher plants are made up of many cells; hence we see that the Amœba is the simplest and lowest of all animals.
The minute spots seen upon it when enlarged beneath a microscope resemble so many cells of carbonate of lime secreted by the worms of the community or colony.
It occurs both in the case of simple cells (though not frequently) and in the higher organisms composed of many cells.
The primaeval ancestors of man, as well as of all other animals, and of all plants composed of many cells, were simple cells living isolated.
They are essentially distinguished from both by the fact that the central part of their body is composed of many cells, and surrounded by a solid membrane.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "many cells" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.