Little hairs that direct dirt and debris out of system... We have cilia in our nose, lungs, and even our inner ears. Probably other places as well... I'm just not sure where else. The cilia in our inner ear helps us hear.
The cilia (ciliated epithelial cell) helps clean out our lungs and if we smoke our cilia may stop working which means our lungs will get cloged up and you'll find it harder to breath.
Easier: Hairlike structure arranged in tightly packed rows that projects from the surface of some cells.
An analogy for cilia would involve something with wavy hairs, like a mermaid in the ocean. The ocean would represent the movement of material and the hairy would show the reaction to the movement.
Cillia are little hairs on a surface. An example is cillia in the membranes in the nasal passage that help move along mucus. Another example is that cillia is on the outside of some bacteria and help them move. Cillia is like many oars that "row" an organism along.
==A Real-Life Object Example== (Like for a model / project) Could be something fuzzy.
A paramecium, a unicellular eukaryote, is an example of a ciliate.
They are hair-like projections from certain types of cells
hair
An everyday example for stick slip motion is that it moves everyday
creation of wind
A can opener.
MIRROR
MIRROR
Smoking.
Cilia wave about in particular manner to perform some particular function. For example the cilia in your respiratory tract push the foreign particles outwards. Cilia push the egg towards the uterus.
An everyday example for stick slip motion is that it moves everyday
Cilia are tiny hairlike projections in, for example the small intestine, that increase the surface area. They usually have a good blood supply.
I would compare cilia to tires of a car, since cilia helps the cell move.
The hair-like structures found in the lungs are known as cilia, specifically motile cilia. There are other forms of cilia as well, for example non-motile cilia can be found in other organ systems, and as organelles on many cells in the body.
Protists are single-celled and they usually move by cilia, flagella, or by amoeboid mechanisms For example; Plasmodium.
cilia
It has cilia
Cilia
No plants have cilia.
The cilia cause the paramecium to move.