Explanation: my favorite show is firefly lane. my favorite charactor is Tully hart. I think the most we have in common is issues with our mother. in the show Tully grows up with her grandmother but then her addict mom comes to take her away and they move into a house on firefly lane. she's in high school at the time. as she grows up she struggles in getting the mother she always wanted. she expects to get certain mother/daughter moments but her own mother just lets her down continuously. that's how I think we are similar. as an adult Tully becomes a famous host on a talk show. she starts sleeping around and drinking a lot so that how we are different.
I'd have to go with:
"Africanized honeybees are now known as killer bees for several scary."
How and when Killer bees were created and where, is immaterial. The main point the article is trying to make is about the Dangers of the Killer Bees and why they are so dangerous.
Maybe you learned to spell the word wrong
1. When I was twelve years old, a drunk driver hit the car my mother was driving while I was in the backseat. I have very few memories of the accident, but I do faintly recall a serious but calming face as I was gently lifted out of the car. The paramedic held my hand as we traveled to the hospital. I was in the hospital for several weeks and that same paramedic came to visit me almost every day. During my stay, I also got to know the various doctors and nurses in the hospital on a personal level. I remember feeling anxiety about my condition, but not sadness or even fear. It seemed to me that those around me, particularly my family, were more fearful of what might happen to me than I was. I don’t believe it was innocence or ignorance, but rather a trust in the abilities of my doctors. It was as if my doctors and I had a silent bond. Now that I’m older I fear death and sickness in a more intense way than I remember experiencing it as a child. My experience as a child sparked a keen interest in how we approach pediatric care, especially as it relates to our psychological and emotional support of children facing serious medical conditions. It was here that I experienced first-hand the power and compassion of medicine, not only in healing but also in bringing unlikely individuals together, such as adults and children, in uncommon yet profound ways. And it was here that I began to take seriously the possibility of becoming a pediatric surgeon.