Answer:
I thnk the answer is a and d
am sorrry if it is wrong
Explanation:
Answer:
Explained below:
Explanation:
Perforating fibers: Accepted term based
Meissner corpuscle: Eponym ( discovered by Georg Meissner and Rudolf Wagner)
Islets of Langerhans: Eponym ( discovered by German pathological anatomist Paul Langerhans).
Intestinal Crypts: Accepted term based
Nephron loop: Accepted term based
Loop of Henle: Eponym ( discovered by German anatomist Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle).
Tactile Cells: Accepted term
Crypts of Lieberkühn: Eponym ( discovered by German anatomist Johann Nathanael Lieberkühn.
Brunner's Gland: Eponym ( discovered by Swiss physician, Johann Conrad Brunner).
Sharpey's fibers: Eponym ( discovered by Scottish anatomist William Sharpey).
Bundle of His: Eponym ( discovered by cardiologist and anatomist Wilhelm His Jr).
Hepatopancreatic sphincter: Accepted term based
<span>In the excerpt from "Dialogue Between Franklin and the Gout," </span>Madame Gout reasons with Franklin about the benefits of exercise by <span>C. making observations to compare the advantages of walking versus taking a carriage.</span> She details how walking works in helping accelerate one's blood flow and how it eventually does good to one's health.
the humid continental climate has hot summers, while the subarctic climate has short, cool summers.
Answer:
c. Vikings took over the monasteries and burned them down.
Explanation:
The Vikings were fierce Scandinavian navigators and warriors from the lands that are now Sweden, Norway, and Denmark.
They raided the coasts of Europe from the eigth century to the eleventh century, when they were christianized.
Monasteries were a particularly vulnerable target for Vikings, because they were inhabited by monks who did not have combat skills. For this reason, Vikings often raided monasteries.
In fact, the first documented Viking raid was in the monastery of Lindisfarne, in Northern England. The attack was devastating, and spread fear in the Christian world.