Yes, non-living things can affect living things. For example, environmental factors like temperature, sunlight, and air quality can have a significant impact on the health and behavior of living organisms. Additionally, non-living things like pollution or habitat destruction can harm or endanger living species.
yes
Yes, some non-living things, like viruses, exhibit characteristics of living things such as replication and evolution. However, they are considered non-living because they cannot carry out these processes on their own and require a host cell to reproduce.
They are classified as non living thing because they dont have the characteristics of living things.
Yes, both living things (organisms) and non-living things (objects, substances) are composed of matter. Matter is anything that occupies space and has mass, and all living and non-living entities are made up of atoms and molecules.
Air is considered a non-living thing. It is a mixture of gases like nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and others that are essential for living organisms, but air itself does not have the characteristics of living things such as growth, reproduction, or metabolism.
yes but some times no
Hardened rocks are not considered to be alive, and living beings (prisoners) break them into smaller rocks, so, yes, they do.
yes
Yes there are relationship between the living and non-living world
yes
They are living things.
yes trees are living
yes
Do you mean how are living things different from non-living? If yes, living things have cells, give off wastes, and some other stuff.
yes... because living things need all non living things like chair, t.v. etc.
Yes, they can die.
Yes indeed. Living things change to non living things when they die. Non living things change into living things through evolution or divine intervention depending on your point of view.