Answer:
Explanation
1) which bathroom they go to.
(girls go to the girls bathroom& Boys go to boys bathroom)
2) how they are supposed to act .
(boys can act anyway but girls have to be girly/classy)
3) what they are supposed to wear
(boys can’t wear skirts,dresses,heels,etc like girls.and girls can wear shorts,hats,boxers,etc. or they are called tome boys)
4)choose how they get treated
5)choose they way u live in general
Answer:
In Nepal, the economy is dominated by agriculture. In the late 1980s, it was the livelihood for more than 90% of the population, although only approximately 20% of the total land area was cultivable, it accounted for, on average, about 60% of the GDP and approximately 75% of exports. Since the formulation of the Fifth Five-Year Plan (1975–80), agriculture has been the highest priority because economic growth was dependent on both increasing the productivity of existing crops and diversifying the agricultural base for use as industrial inputs.
Terraced farming on the foothills of the Himalayas is a common sight in many of the villages in Nepal
Nepalese women planting rice
Cultivation in the Kathmandu Valley
According to the World Bank, agriculture is the main source of food, income, and employment for the majority.It provides about 33% of the gross domestic product (GDP)
In trying to increase agricultural production and diversify the agricultural base, the government focused on irrigation, the use of fertilizers and insecticides, the introduction of new implements
Answer:
"You can get or transmit HIV only through specific activities. Most commonly, people get or transmit HIV through sexual behaviors and needle or syringe use. Only certain body fluids—blood, semen, pre-seminal fluid, rectal fluids, vaginal fluids, and breast milk—from a person who has HIV can transmit HIV"
- https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/basics/transmission.html
"HIV is a virus. AIDS is a condition. They are not the same thing. HIV is an infection that you can catch and spread to other people, AIDS is a condition (or syndrome) that develops – usually many years later - in people who have been infected with HIV, but have not had the right, or perhaps any, treatment"
- https://hivselftest.co.uk/blogs/news/are-hiv-and-aids-the-same-thing
Answer: A bone like structure that carries blood around the body. Other veins and bones send the blood recieved from another bone into another bone. This is how it works.
Explanation:
Hope my answer helps you.