a specialized cell, group of cells, or organ of endothelial origin that selectively removes materials from the blood, concentrates or alters them, and secretes them for further use in the body or for elimination from the body — compare endocrine gland, exocrine gland.
The answer is <u>B.</u> <em>from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere</em>
Answer is: <span>Using jargon, or overly complex terms, can contribute to semantic noise.
There are four forms of communication noise: </span>psychological<span> noise, physical noise, </span>physiological<span> and </span>semantic<span> noise.
</span><span>Semantic noise occurs when</span> sender of the message uses a word or a phrase (complex terms) that we don't know the meaning of.
<span><em>Whether living or non living:</em>
<em>When you put a sample of tissue under a microscope, if u can see a cell membrane, and can identify some cell structures like nucleus, mitochondria, vacuoles etc. , it was living, if not, its a non living thing.</em></span>
<span><em>However some cells don't have a nucleus( eg. prokaryotic cells), but all cells have a cell membrane or some sort of protective covering to contain the cell's insides. </em></span>
<span><em>To check if your specimen maybe-once living, maybe-still living "something", is living, get a look at it through an electron microscope - thats the best microscope ever- and see if the mitochondria's making any ATP( adenosine triphosphate, source of energy for most organisms), if it does, its living. If not, no</em></span><em>n living. :)</em>