1. Age of Enlightenment (the period during the industrial revolution)
2. Emotion and nature
4. “Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains”
(Those are all the ones I know)
Macromolecules
A B
elements found in carbohydrates and lipids carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
lipids have less of this element than carbohydrates oxygen
element found in all organic compounds carbon
element found in proteins but not carbohydrates or lipids nitrogen
Answer:
nice question but I don't know keep it up going
Answer:
1. T
2. T
3. NP
4. F
5. F
Explanation:
In somatic cells, the cell cycle can be divided into 1-the interphase, 2-the mitotic phase or M phase, and 3-the G₀ phase. In turn, the interphase of the cell cycle can be divided into three phases: 1-the gap 1 (G1) phase or growth 1 phase, 2-the S phase (DNA replication or DNA synthesis), and 3-the gap 2 (G2) phase or growth 2 phase. During the G1 phase, the cell synthesizes key enzymes which are required during DNA replication (S phase) and cell division (M phase). Cytoplasmic factors are proteins and messenger RNAs (mRNAs) that control cell functions during the cell cycle. This cycle is modulated by proteins known as control factors, i.e., cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) that work together to control the progression through different phases of the cell cycle. The transition from S to G2 occurs after DNA replication. This transition (S to G2) is controlled by a DNA damage checkpoint orchestrated by the ATM (Ataxia telangiectasia mutated) and ATR (Ataxia Telangiectasia and Rad3 related) kinases which are recruited to DNA damage sites. Moreover, the transition from G2 to M phase is mediated by the accumulation of mitotic inducers, which lead to an increase in the activity of mitotic kinase and finally trigger mitotic entry.
Answer:
b. reticulate venation
Explanation:
The arrangement of veins in a leaf is called the venation pattern; monocots have parallel venation, while dicots have reticulate venation. The arrangement of leaves on a stem is known as phyllotaxy; leaves can be classified as either alternate, spiral, opposite, or whorled.