1. Exercise develops physical fitness.
2. Range of motion is how far any body part can move in any direction.
3. Muscle myofibrils are made of both thick and thin filaments. These filaments are the used in muscle contractions. The thick filaments and thin filaments slide along each other during a muscle contraction.
4. Lactic acid is removed from muscles when there is an increased amount of blood flow (usually during exercise).
5. Posture is the way a person holds their body when sitting or standing.
6. Varicose veins occur when the veins are weakened and become twisted over time. Normal veins will flow in one direction and there is no back flow because of the valves. When veins are weakened and the valves don’t work properly, the blood can collect in your legs.
7. Antagonistic muscles pair with agonist muscles (best example is the bicep-tricep pair). This means that as one muscle contracts, the other will relax.
Answer:
Explanation:
The story's key idea is that your acts may be negative, so measures have to be betaken to reverse the damage that you might have caused. Brayden initially allows his indignation get the better of him and he decides to chuck his juice pocket into the water out of rage. After reading a tale about a bear who discovers who his acts have poisoned a water, Brayden acknowledges that he has made a mistake and takes the juice pouch out of the water.
Answer:
"West Bellerton has had a community garden for ten years"
Explanation:
Saying how the community garden has existed does not show a positive benefit of the community garden, while the others show a positive benefit of having a community garden
Answer:
look around the word to see how it is used
replace the word with a more familiar word
Explanation:
It is common to read a text that has an unknown word, or difficult to understand, which makes it difficult to understand the text. The most common in these cases is for the reader to look for a dictionary that shows the meaning of the reading, but this can disrupt the reading pace. To avoid this, the reader can observe the words that are presented around the unknown word and identify the context that these words present. Through this context, the reader can understand what the meaning of the unknown word is and how it fits into that sentence.
The reader can also replace this unknown word with a similar word that he knows the meaning of. However, be careful with this strategy, as there are many false cognates in the language, which are similar words that have different meanings.