1) Black Flies are small black flies, the female of which sucks blood and can transmit a number of serious human and animal diseases. Large swarms sometimes cause distress to livestock and humans.
2) Malaria is an intermittent and remittent fever caused by a protozoan parasite that invades the red blood cells. The parasite is transmitted by mosquitoes in many tropical and subtropical regions.
3) Carnations are a doubled-flowered cultivated variety of clove pink, with gray-green leaves and showy pink, white, or red flowers.
4) Cattle are large ruminant animals with horns and cloven hoofs, domesticated for meat or milk, or as beasts of burden; cows.
5) Crabgrass is creeping grass that can become a serious weed.
Answer: Battle of San Juan Hill, (1 July 1898), also known as the Battle of San Juan Heights, the most significant U.S. land victory, and one of the final battles, of the Spanish-American War.
Explanation: The Battle of San Juan Hill, also known as the Battle for the San Juan Heights, was a major battle of the Spanish–American War fought between an American force under the command of William Rufus Shafter and Joseph Wheeler against a Spanish force led by Arsenio Linares y Pombo.
Answer:
There are three answers A, B, and E
Explanation:
Good question. There is no correct answer, it's all subjective. But personally, I think that humans were brought here to ensure the earth's survival. Because human's have the mind capacity of all living organisms to build artificial intelligence, which in turn once they reach artificial super intelligence, then robots will be able to make themselves smarter, and with all of this extensive knowledge, they will be able to ensure that everything gets stable, and we don't use up all the non-renewable resources, we don't crash into a meteor, we don't die from a lack of oxygen... because artificial intelligence will ensure that this will not happen...
Pretty crazy, I know. But it's interesting!
Explanation:
John Locke considers the state of nature in his Second Treatise on Civil Government written around the time of the Exclusion Crisis in England during the 1680s. For Locke, in the state of nature all men are free "to order their actions, and dispose of their possessions and persons, as they think fit, within the bounds of the law of nature." "The state of Nature has a law of Nature to govern it", and that law is reason. Locke believes that reason teaches that "no one ought to harm another in his life, liberty, and or property" and that transgressions of this may be punished. Locke describes the state of nature and civil society to be opposites of each other, and the need for civil society comes in part from the perpetual existence of the state of nature. This view of the state of nature is partly deduced from Christian belief (unlike Hobbes, whose philosophy is not dependent upon any prior theology).