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GCSE Biology Practice Test: Osmosis - How Water Passes Through Membranes
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Avg score: 64% Most missed: “Water molecules move from...”
Osmosis refers specifically to the movement of water molecules through partially permeable membranes. Partially permeable membranes allow water molecules to pass through them in both directions, and this is how osmosis occurs.. If there are solutions of different concentrations on opposite sides of the membrane, it is important that you realise that water molecules are passing through in both directions. It is a special case of diffusion as it involves only water molecules and a partially permeable membrane. To understand it properly involves your knowledge of the particle theory of matter... Show more
GCSE Biology Practice Test: Osmosis - How Water Passes Through Membranes
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10 Questions

1. Osmosis takes place in this important structure.
2. Dilute means...
3. Why is osmosis not the same thing as diffusion?
4. Potato cylinders are put into a strong sugar solution. After an hour they are...
5. Plants use osmosis to prevent...
6. Osmosis takes place in which of the following?
7. Osmosis is the movement of which molecules?
8. Water molecules move from...
9. Water molecules move...
10. In living organisms, the partially permeable membrane is the...