Marcellus
Marullus calls a group of Roman workmen "blocks and stones" in the following passage: "You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things! You hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome, knew you not Pompey?" He is complaining about their insensitivity in cheering the victor in a civil war, when the loser was also one of their fellow-citizens (and a well-renowned one at that).
It was spoken by a fan of Pompey, who was defeated by Julius Caesar. When Caeser marched through Rome as victor, the speech was aimed at all those who were cheering Caesar instead of mourning the defeat of Pompei. The peoples hearts were made of stone, and they had no feelings (senseless).
The root for the word "senseless" is "sense," which refers to the ability to perceive and understand things. The addition of the suffix "-less" changes the meaning to "lacking sense" or "without sense."
stones and things like that I think
pathogens
Cells
a cell
a cell
stones and clay
Living things are made up of cells as their building blocks, while nonliving things are made up of atoms and molecules. These building blocks combine in various ways to form the structures and functions of both living and nonliving things.
A cells