This is a very opinionated question, so I don't know how much I can help, but as the babysitter of four kids around this age- I would suggest telling Timothy that he can take a nap if he wants, but he still has to go to bed early- (8 or 9 or whatever.) he doesn't neccesarily have to sleep, but he does have to stay in bed quietly and not disturb his mother. (my family does the same thing, they're allowed to read or talk to each other quietly if they're the 2 that share a room.) Likewise if he doesn't take a nap and becomes grouchy, he could be "punished" by going to bed earlier, which may end up helping. Timothy might be agreeable to not taking a nap because you could frame it like him being a "big kid."
You could also just make it so his naps are shorter, and wake him up on your own instead of letting him sleep for a full 2-3 hours.
Awwwwww thank u sooo michhh. Really helped me
Answer:
This question refers to the article "Last flight of the honeybee? " Written by by Alison Benjamin and Brian McCallum.
Explanation:
According to this article what is done is to move the bees to a place with heat during the winter. There they will be given the necessary food so that they can reproduce in greater quantity and be able to have more worker bees when pollinating.
Once they emerge, the bees are attracted to the nectar of the flowers (which is secreted by the flower and contains many sugars and flavorings). Then, they settle in the plant and begin the suction process. As they find themselves sucking the nectar, the bees are dotted with pollen (male propagule of flowering plants).
When they finish sucking the nectar from the flowers and move towards others, they scatter the pollen that is the male part, on the female part of the flowers, thus managing to fertilize them.
After some time, these plants manage to bear fruit and thus complete the pollination process.
<span>"Everyday Use," is pulled from the text and pertains to functional handiwork as opposed to static artifacts. In her story, Alice Walker writes about the "creative legacy of ordinary black women" which is a valuable part of real African American heritage. </span>
<span>As a critic of the Stalin regime, Orwell deplored both the horrors inflicted by British industrialization and Russian communist oppression. He feared a new, dawning age of totalitarianism on a global scale.</span>