Question:
Why does the virus need a host in order to multiply?
Answer:
Use the cells' resources
Explanation:
A virus is typically a is a DNA or RNA moiety encased in a protein capsule. The capsule is usually specific to the class and type of virus and it lends to the virulence of the entity. In order for infection to be established the virus must bypass the host's immune system and it's immune response and invade a host cell. There it will incorporate it's genetic material into the hosts' nucleus and harness the machinery that it does not in itself possess in order to make multiple copies of itself. It uses the host cell's DNA replication machinery, proteins amino acids and energy among other things before it bursts out of the cell and destroys it. This continues for some time and eventually the host may perish. The virus will then be passed along to a different host where it's replication using that hosts machinery will continue.
Answer: True
Options: True/False
Explanation: An officer who is present when a crime is being committed can make an arrest without a warrant. Their presence includes the use of any of their senses, whether they hear, see, smell, to perceive that a crime is being committed.
However, an officer can't make an arrest based on a hunch or a suspicion. While she does not have to be absolutely certain, there needs to be a belief based on facts or circumstances to make such an arrest. This is known as probable cause.
Answer:
without filing a complaint, to supervisors, (no written record), it is impossible to prove your case.
Answer:
Luisa finds and corrects an error in ___punctuation_______.
Explanation:
a) The paragraph omitted a comma punctuation mark after the word "campfire." When Luisa puts this comma after "campfire," the sentence becomes grammatically correct.
So the error that Luisa finds and corrects in the passage is the omission of comma punctuation. A comma punctuation mark gives a short break in a sentence. Full stop gives a long break.
Answer:
dispositional attribution.
Explanation:
There are two distinct types of attribution in psychology including the situational or external and internal or dispositional attribution.
Dispositional attribution: In psychology, the term "dispositional attribution" is also denoted as "internal attribution" and is determined as a phenomenon an individual thinks or infers that the other person's behavior or an event is caused due to some personal factors, for example, feelings, traits, or abilities.
In the question above, the given statement signifies the dispositional attribution.