Answer:
There are many interesting jobs that surprisingly exist. Brain surgery is one of them. I think that people who do brain surgeries are psychopaths because I can't imagine opening a brain myself. This job is both interesting and dangerous because if the doctor touches the wrong part of the brain, the patient will intinctly die. The human brain looks like your intestines, a pinkish jelly-like substance it's VERY sensitive. I wonder how did scientists discovered how the human brain works. How could a insignificant creature learn all by itself how it's brain works? If we could learn about our brain, then why do other animals can't? How did we discover cells? How did we create technology? This is when I start thinking, Do aliens exist? I have done unstoppable research about how did humans discovered or created technology. I have found absolutely nothing that says about that. But I do now know, that the Egyptians had drawings of aliens in their pyramids. So I now think, Did aliens gave us technology?
I don't really know. I've done this since I was 4 when I used to get nose bleeds that lasted a good while. I got them until I was an adult when a specialist cotterized(sp?) a blood vessel in my nose. I got them even then, but not as often and not as persistently.
I also put ice cold ice packs on my forehead.
I suppose you are swallowing blood that has been exposed to the air. That means it is carrying oxygenated blood. Other than being prohibited in the Bible, I don't see anything really wrong with it. When you look it up, it says that it can bring about vomiting. That never happened to me.
Answer:
<u>The article is an Expository article. </u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Note how the author, Matthew Hutson began the article, he said<em> </em><em>"Consider a series of experiments conducted by researchers led by...," </em>that is to say, he was giving information about the subject matter to his readers.
The main idea or central thesis of this article is to portray how Puritan believes are still present in American society today.
One reason was that "the so-called Protestant work ethic" of respected men like Martin Luther and John Calvin likely influenced the work habits of American culture.
One specific evidence that Hutson offer for why the Puritans still influence American culture today was a study that shows how the view of Martin Luther and John Calvin, in which "they believed in predestination and viewed success as a sign of salvation". I quote Hutson,
"American and Canadian college students were asked to solve word puzzles involving anagrams. But first, some were subtly exposed to (or “primed” with) salvation-related words like “heaven” and “redeem,” while others were exposed to neutral words. The researchers found that the Americans — but not the Canadians — solved more anagrams with salvation on the mind."
To some extent, because the study didn't claim all of American society were still been influenced by the Puritans but makes a balanced conclusion.
A pronoun is a word that's used in place of a noun or noun phrase, like “he,” “she,” or “it,”