thrombocytes
myeloid stem cells
Well, everything, I would say. Do you mean to function normally, or to be able to live? In the first case, you need everything, except for your tonsils and your appendix, perhaps. In the second case, you only need your organs, and your nerve system.
Yes they do. MHC 1 are expressed by all nucleated calls (except neurones) and platelets. MHC 11 are expressed by B-cells, macrophages and dendtitic cells. Therefore, some cells express both types.
except except except
The pronoun that completes the sentence is an objective pronoun, object of the preposition 'except'.Examples:Everyone was here except Peggy and me.Everyone was here except Peggy and you.Everyone was here except Peggy and us.Everyone was here except Peggy and him.Everyone was here except Peggy and her.Everyone was here except Peggy and them.
to leave out
They were all there except me
Accept is a homophone for except.
Yes, you can put a comma before except. Example of a comma before except in a sentence- She can do it, except that the mountain is too steep
The word "except" can be a preposition: "Everyone went home from school except me." a conjunction: "Everyone except me went home from school." an idiom: "I would have gone home except for detention." or a verb: "The teacher will except those students in detention from going home."
do you except ppo insurance
There is no actual difference: the preposition "except" means "except for" (the double preposition is also seen in but forand as to). The use of "except for" to mean "were it not for" is rare in modern English (e.g. Except for the cost, wind energy is a fine idea.)The word except is also used (much less frequently) as a verb, meaning to leave out or to exclude.