Answer:
Table Sugar!
Explanation:
Sucrose, also known as common sugar, is used by humans to sweeten foods. Yummy ice cream, making coffee a little less strong, there are lots of things you can use sugar for! It is composed mainly of glucose and fructose.
 
        
             
        
        
        
<span>The trick here is to understand the definition of each of the cellular transport or function mechanisms listed. These are some interesting (and strange) analogies!
Facilitated Diffusion
This is when a mechanism assists in diffusing (spreading) some material into an environment. The dog on the wagon going through a spring loaded door would shoot it out into the environment. This is an odd analogy but Point 3 would be the one.
Active Transport 
Is when energy is expended to transport molecules somewhere against a concentration gradient or some other barrier. Examples include transporting molecules across a cell wall. The best analogy is the dog being dragged into a bathtub (Point 1).
Phagocytosis 
This is when a larger cell consumes a molecule often like eating. This matches to point 2 - the child eating the doughnut.
Passive Diffusion
Is when a concentration of molecules naturally diffuse into an environment. This suits point 5 - the crowded room full of people.
Pinocytosis
Is the budding of cell membranes to consume liquid in the surrounding environment. I guess a woman drinking tea is the closest analogy listed (Point 4).</span>
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Urinary bladder - superior mesenteric ganglion
Explanation:
The inferior mesenteric ganglion is located in the center of the abdomen where the inferior mesenteric artery begins. The axons of postganglionic neurons extend through the hypogastric plexus. These neurons then innervate the blood vessels of several organs like the rectum, urinary bladder, and distal colon, etc.
The postganglionic neurons from superior mesenteric ganglion innervate the blood vessels of the small intestine and proximal colon.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Dissecting microscopes used for the observation of larger objects and u can get a magnification of less than 100x. 
<span>Dissecting microscopes are most often used by plant biologists
IM NOT VERY SURE</span>