organic form
organic form, a concept that likens literary works to living organisms forming themselves by a process of 'natural' growth. The doctrine of organic form, promoted in the early 19th century by S. T. Coleridge and subsequently favoured by American New Criticism, argues that in an artistic work the whole is more than the mere sum of its component parts, and that form and content fuse indivisibly in an 'organic unity'. It rejects as 'mechanical' the neoclassical concept of conformity to rules, along with the related assumption that form or style is an 'ornament' to a pre‐existing content. It tends to be hostile to conceptions of genre and convention, as it is to the practice of paraphrase. Carried to a dogmatic conclusion, its emphasis on unity condemns any literary analysis as a destructive abstraction; this attitude is sometimes referred to as organicism.
Above retrieved from answers.com
Viper1
organic farming is an agricultural system that seeks to provide you, the consumer, with fresh, tasty and authentic food while respecting natural life-cycle systems.
Minerals seeping into an organisms remains form fossils. sediment
ammonia
All organisms have genetic codes in the form of DNA. LOCI.
Prokaryotic organisms such as Bacteria have circular form of chromosomes
Single cell organisms.
bacteria
because they are the only organisms that can take sunlight in the form form of glucose
We get organisms because eggs and sperm unite to form embryos, usually. Although some organisms form from spores or cell division.
Which term describes body parts of different organisms that are similar in form?
Yes but only when they form organic molecules that form living organisms or when the molecules are important to certain organisms.
Plankton are the organisms that form the base of most open-ocean food webs.
Organs combine with tissues and fluids to form organisms.