Answer:
Explanation:
HELP PLEASE ASAP Read the excerpt from "On Becoming an Inventor" by Dean Kamen.
When I was twelve years old and Barton, my older brother, was around fifteen, we took over the family basement. At first, I made a darkroom for developing pictures, and Bart was using it as his lab where he was raising about one hundred white rats, removing their thymus glands, and trying to figure out the glands' dysfunction. He wanted pictures taken of his experiment, doing the surgery on rats, and since I already had a darkroom, I took the pictures, though somewhat reluctantly. I didn't like the blood.
What can you conclude about Barton from the excerpt?
He was interested in solving medical mysteries at a rather early age.
He did not understand why Dean would be squeamish about the blood.
He went on to become a very famous and successful doctor.
He had a severe dislike for rats and all other kinds of rodents.
Answer:
De canibus gerunt in solitudinem waterskins.
Explanation:
I'll use me and one of my sisters as an example if that's okay. (also, I only have . between every word my sister says because she talks really fast.)
Me: "Why are you so upset?"
Sister: "I'M.NOT!.LEAVE.ME.ALONE!"
Me: "Come now, and tell me, or do I have to get Mammaw?"
Sister: "No.I.Don't.Want.To.Tell.You.I.Said.Leave.Me.Alone!"
Me: "What ever. Eventually, I'll find out."
Basically, or at least in my adopted family, the females like to yell when they're upset or angered, and when they're in a good mood, they talk as if they never yelled in their life. I know it's not the same for all females, because I don't do it and I have friends who don't do it.