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This section includes InterviewSolutions, each offering curated multiple-choice questions to sharpen your knowledge and support exam preparation. Choose a topic below to get started.

15801.

What is the basis similarity of all the living organisms​

Answer»

they are SENSITIVE and they UNDERSTAND the FEELING

15802.

9. An eight year old child islikely to have temporary andteeth​

Answer» BUDDY, are you sure this is the WHOLE QUESTION ...? I don't think so..can you be a bit more SPECIFIC...?
15803.

Blood fails to clot while flowing in the blood vessels because of presence of

Answer»

Blood fails' to clot while FLOWING in the 'blood vessel' because of the 'presence' of heparin. EXPLANATION: Heparin is a blood anti-coagulant that is present in the blood to prevent it from clotting and to ALLOW blood to freely FLOW through blood vessels.

15804.

@ How many types of food &1im the name of any kindto plant​

Answer»

.......................................

15805.

The process of turning and loosening the soil​

Answer»

the process of TURNING and LOOSENING the SOIL is known as ploughing

15806.

LEARNING OUTCOMES 1. Distinguish the three states of matter in termsof movement of particles.2. Relate the three states of matter with energyof movement of particles in them:3. Describe the change of state using Kinetictheory :. Boiling• Vaporisation• Melting• FusionEvaporationCondensation• SublimationDepositionFreezing. Compare the states of matter in the formof tables;11. GI16​

Answer»

Solid is the STATE in which matter maintains a fixed volume and shape; liquid is the state in which matter adapts to the shape of its container but varies only slightly in volume; and gas is the state in which matter expands to occupy the volume and shape of its containerTheir vibration is related to their kinetic energy. In the solid the particles VIBRATE in place. Liquid – In a liquid, particles will flow or glide over one another, but stay toward the bottom of the container. ... Gas – In a gas, particles are in continual straight-line motionAs ice MELTS into water, kinetic energy is being added to the particles. This causes them to be 'excited' and they break the bonds that hold them TOGETHER as a solid, RESULTING in a change of state: solid -> liquidExplanation:

15807.

Properties of metal​

Answer»

l PROPERTIES of MetalsMetals are lustrous, malleable, ductile, good CONDUCTORS of heat and electricity. Other properties include: STATE: Metals are solids at room TEMPERATURE with the exception of mercury, which is liquid at room temperature (GALLIUM is liquid on hot days).

15808.

Draw a clear diagram of sexual reproduction in flowering plant!!!!!!!!​

Answer»

Check-out the above PROVIDED attachment...✍️ Sexual Reproduction in AngiospermsA Typical Flowering PLANTS Consist following Parts :-SepalsPetalsFilament of StamenAnther of STAMEN Stigma of CarpelStyle of CarpelOvary of CarpelOvules inside the OVARY

15809.

Answer in one word the milk producing animals ​

Answer» COW ,GOAT and SheepExplanation:Don't FORGET to MARK as BRAINLIEST....
15810.

The chemical used to kill pests​

Answer»

the chemicals USED to kill pests are KNOWN as pesticides.eg: ddt, BORIC ACID etc.

15811.

The machine which is used for bothharvesting and thrishing at the same times​

Answer»

Explanation:combine HARVESTER The NAME of the farm machine used for harvesting and threshing is known as combine harvester. Combine harvester, or SIMPLY combine is a versatile machine designed to efficiently HARVEST a VARIETY of grain crops.plz mark me as brainliest

15812.

Theundesirable plants whichgrow in field.herbs, weeds,sicble,rabi​

Answer»

the ANSWER is WEEDS PLS MARK me as BRAINLIEST

15813.

Whichone isa man-madeSubstance..urea,compost,dry leaves​

Answer»

UREANH2=CO=NH2.......

15814.

What is meant by nature​

Answer»

according to me is place where the environment is BALANCED such that there is a proportional population of every organism. The atmosphere of nature also has a uniform ratio.Nature is a place where every organism LIVE LIKE they were supposed to. Nature is a place where every organism has hope and none of them is targeted primarily.HOPE THIS HELPED !!MARK MY ANSWER AS THE BRAINLIEST

15815.

- The method involues scaturing of seedsby hand,​

Answer»

Hand sowing or (planting) is the PROCESS of casting HANDFULS of seed over prepared ground, or broadcasting (from which the technological term is derived). Usually, a drag or HARROW is employed to incorporate the seed into the soil. The process of scattering SEEDS by hand is known as manual sowing .

15816.

What is meant by science​

Answer» STUDY of and knowledge about the PHYSICAL world and NATURAL laws
15817.

Name the animals given in the figure below​

Answer» 1) RED eye frog2)TOUCAN hope it HELPS u.......
15818.

The type of resources on basis of stock are fill and fill resources​

Answer» TION:HEYA.................RENEWABLE and non-renewablehope this HELPS.......☺☺keep FOLLOWING ❤✅❣
15819.

You shake hand with your friend Name the two forces that come into play during the moment you shake hand​

Answer»

When you shake HANDS with your FRIEND since you hand doesn't merge with your friend's :-) Hence there is CONTACT stresses. Next is the shaking movement by shoulder muscles which when synchronized with your friends movement gives least load else there is the feeling of dead weight or in SCIENTIFIC terms a lagging or leading force hope you could visualize it Nice QUESTION though:-) Best way to know is if you really want to know chase your intuition and know which force is there by just applying that force

15820.

What is decomposition reactions ​

Answer»

tion:decomposition reaction can be defined as a TYPE of chemical reaction in which under SUITABLE conditions, one single compound SPLITS into multiple simpler substances.General Reaction mechanismAB -> A + B

15821.

What is pisciculture?? ​

Answer»

tion:ALOHA ! Fish FARMING or rearing of fishes can be known as pisciculture.Thanking you MATE,.@ TWILIGHT Astro ✌️☺️¯\_(ツ)_/¯

15822.

Short notes on usefulness of virus​

Answer»

Jump to Notes · In 1892, the Russian BIOLOGIST Dmitri Ivanovsky used this filter to study what is now KNOWN as the tobacco mosaic virus: crushed LEAF extracts ...Missing: fullness ‎| MUST INCLUDE: fullness

15823.

Exple. karfi. and. Radhi. crop​

Answer»

dhhkkbbgg EX to hmm I'm OK I'm on the ex was song TOMORROW exhausted look edge IMPORTANT

15824.

What is the meaning of prisipatation

Answer»

tion:the action or PROCESS of PRECIPITATING a substance from a solution. ORrain, snow, sleet, or hail that falls to or condenses on the GROUND.

15825.

What is the largest planet in the universe?​

Answer» JUPITER is the LARGEST PLANET in the universeplease MARK me BRAINLIEST
15826.

Our food contains several components known as _________ .

Answer»

NutrientsExplanation:Our food CONTAINS three main substances called nutrients. These are FATS, proteins and carbohydrates. In addition our body requires WATER, SALTS (MINERALS), vitamins and fibresmarķ as brainliest plz

15827.

How antibiotics such as streptomycin, chloromycetin are obtained from bacteria?? ​

Answer»

Streptomycin stops bacterial GROWTH by damaging cell membranes and inhibiting protein synthesis. Specifically, it BINDS to the 16S rRNA of the bacterial ribosome, INTERFERING with the binding of formyl-methionyl-tRNA to the 30S subunit. This PREVENTS initiation of protein synthesis.

15828.

What is house and how its use ​

Answer»

is a building for people to live in. It is usually built for a family (parents and their children). Most modern houses have special AREAS or ROOMS for people to do the things that they need to live comfortably. A modern house has a PLACE to COOK food, a place to eat, places to sleep and a place to wash. please mark me BRAINLIEST

15829.

What did a pegion eat?​

Answer»

Pigeons and doves eat a variety of grains, SEEDS, greens, BERRIES, fruits, and will occasionally eat INSECTS, snails and earthworms in the wild

15830.

Phosphorus mean in hindhi and tahnks karo​

Answer»

Writers often do a lot of explaining along the way. They frequently shed light on why a character is acting as they do; they reveal people’s secret thoughts and motives. The characters are much more clearly defined than the people we actually encounter. On the page, we meet purer villains, braver more resourceful heroes, people whose suffering is more obvious or whose virtues are more striking than would ever normally be the case. They – and their actions – provide us with simplified targets for our emotional lives. We can love or revile them, pity them or condemn them more neatly than we ever can our friends and acquaintances. We need simplification because our minds get checkmated by the complexity of our lives. The writer, on rare but hugely SIGNIFICANT occasions, puts into words feelings that had long eluded us, they know us better than we know ourselves. They seem to be narrating our own stories, but with a clarity we could never achieve. Literature corrects our native inarticulacy. So often we feel lost for words; we’re impressed by the sight of a bird wheeling in the dusk sky; we’re aware of a particular atmosphere at dawn, we love someone’s slightly wild but sympathetic manner. We struggle to verbalise our feelings; we may end up remarking: ‘that’s so nice’. Our feelings seem too complex, subtle, vague and elusive for us to be able to spell out. The ideal writer homes in on a few striking things: the angle of the wing; the slow MOVEMENT of the largest branch of a tree; the angle of the mouth in a smile. Simplification doesn’t betray the nuance of life, it renders life more visible. 716px-fragonard_the_reader The great writers build bridges to people we might otherwise have dismissed as unfeasibly strange or unsympathetic. They cut through to the common core of experience. By selection and EMPHASIS, they reveal the important things we share. They show us where to look. They help us to feel. Often we want to be good, we want to care, we want to feel warmly and tenderly – but can’t. It seems there is no suitable receptacle in our ordinary lives into which our emotions can vent themselves. Our relationships are too compromised and fraught. It can feel too risky to be very nice to someone who might not reciprocate. So we don’t do much feeling; we freeze over. But then – in the pages of a story – we meet someone, perhaps she is very beautiful, tender, sensitive, young and dying; and we weep for her and all the cruelty and injustice of the world. And we come away, not DEVASTATED, but refreshed. Our emotional muscles are exercised and their strength rendered newly available for our lives. Not all books necessarily contain the simplifications we happen to need. We are often not in the right place to make use of the knowledge a book has to offer. The task of linking the right book to the right person at the right time hasn’t yet received the attention it deserves: newspapers and friends recommend books to us because they work for them, without quite thinking through why they might also work for us. But when we happen to come across the ideal book for us we are presented with an extraordinarily clearer, more lucid, better organised ACCOUNT of our own concerns and experiences: for a time at least our minds become less clouded and our hearts become more accurately sensitive. Through books’ benign simplification, we become a little better at being who we always really were.TwitterFacebookEmailPrintRELATED PRODUCTS FROM OUR SHOPCards for PerspectiveA set of 20 cards featuring fresh perspectives through which to look at life. Perspectives to restore calm and clarity.Shop now »Existentialist Notebooks3 Notebooks, 3 ThinkersShop now »The Thinker GameA card game designed to test your knowledge of history’s great thinkers. Each card provides the essential information – a summary of their work, life and historical timeline – to help other players guess which great mind you hold in your hand.Shop now »RELATED ARTICLESCHAPTER 6. LEISUREEaster for AtheistsCHAPTER 6. LEISUREWhat Comes After Religion?If you’ve enjoyed reading The Book of Life, please join our mailing list and we’ll keep you in touch about the latest sections of the book and news from our parent company, The School of LifeSUBSCRIBEWhat is The Book of LifeNewsletter Sign upTwitterShopThe School of Life© The Book of Life"Explanation:

15831.

What are the advantages of laboratory thermometer? ​

Answer» TION:The advantages of these types of thermometers is that they are cheap, easy to read, can be submerged in liquids, require very little maintenance and are RELIABLE. The DISADVANTAGES are that they break easily and there is risk of MERCURY poisoning if the glass tube breakshope it will help you thanks mark me as brilliant idea
15832.

What are the disadvantages of clinical thermometer?​

Answer»

tion:The ADVANTAGES of these types ofthermometers is that they are CHEAP, easy to read, can be submerged in liquids, require very little maintenance and are RELIABLE. The disadvantagesare that they break easily and there is risk of mercury poisoning if the glass tube breaks..PLS MARK AS BRAINLIST...

15833.

Complete the following diagram​

Answer» EXPLANATION: the below PICTURE is ANSWER
15834.

Plants breathing is production of plants in a padicular or specific area is it true or false​

Answer»

Writers often do a lot of explaining along the way. They frequently shed light on why a character is acting as they do; they reveal people’s secret thoughts and motives. The characters are much more clearly defined than the people we actually encounter. On the page, we meet purer villains, braver more resourceful heroes, people whose suffering is more obvious or whose virtues are more striking than would EVER normally be the case. They – and their actions – provide us with simplified targets for our emotional lives. We can love or revile them, pity them or condemn them more neatly than we ever can our friends and acquaintances. We need simplification because our minds get checkmated by the complexity of our lives. The writer, on rare but hugely significant occasions, puts into words feelings that had long eluded us, they know us better than we know ourselves. They seem to be narrating our own stories, but with a clarity we could never achieve. Literature corrects our native inarticulacy. So often we feel lost for words; we’re impressed by the sight of a bird wheeling in the dusk sky; we’re aware of a particular atmosphere at dawn, we love someone’s slightly wild but sympathetic manner. We struggle to verbalise our feelings; we may end up remarking: ‘that’s so nice’. Our feelings seem too complex, subtle, vague and elusive for us to be able to spell out. The ideal writer homes in on a few striking things: the angle of the wing; the slow movement of the largest branch of a tree; the angle of the mouth in a smile. Simplification doesn’t betray the nuance of life, it renders life more visible. 716px-fragonard_the_reader The great writers build bridges to people we might otherwise have dismissed as unfeasibly strange or unsympathetic. They cut through to the COMMON core of experience. By selection and emphasis, they reveal the important things we share. They show us where to look. They help us to feel. Often we want to be good, we want to CARE, we want to feel warmly and tenderly – but can’t. It seems there is no suitable receptacle in our ordinary lives into which our emotions can vent themselves. Our relationships are too compromised and fraught. It can feel too risky to be very nice to someone who might not RECIPROCATE. So we don’t do much feeling; we freeze over. But then – in the pages of a story – we meet someone, perhaps she is very beautiful, tender, sensitive, young and dying; and we weep for her and all the cruelty and injustice of the world. And we come away, not devastated, but refreshed. Our emotional muscles are exercised and their strength rendered newly available for our lives. Not all books necessarily contain the simplifications we happen to need. We are often not in the right place to make use of the knowledge a book has to offer. The task of linking the right book to the right person at the right time hasn’t yet received the attention it deserves: newspapers and friends recommend books to us because they work for them, without quite thinking through why they might also work for us. But when we happen to come across the ideal book for us we are presented with an extraordinarily clearer, more lucid, better organised account of our own concerns and EXPERIENCES: for a time at least our minds become less clouded and our hearts become more accurately sensitive. Through books’ benign simplification, we become a little better at being who we always really were.TwitterFacebookEmailPrintRELATED PRODUCTS FROM OUR SHOPCards for PerspectiveA set of 20 cards featuring fresh perspectives through which to look at life. Perspectives to restore calm and clarity.Shop now »Existentialist Notebooks3 Notebooks, 3 ThinkersShop now »The Thinker GameA card game designed to test your knowledge of history’s great thinkers. Each card provides the essential information – a summary of their work, life and historical timeline – to help other players guess which great mind you hold in your hand.Shop now »RELATED ARTICLESCHAPTER 6. LEISUREEaster for AtheistsCHAPTER 6. LEISUREWhat Comes After Religion?If you’ve enjoyed reading The Book of Life, please join our mailing list and we’ll keep you in touch about the latest sections of the book and news from our parent company, The School of LifeSUBSCRIBEWhat is The Book of LifeNewsletter Sign upTwitterShopThe School of Life© The Book of Life"Explanation:

15835.

Iron is essential for what ​

Answer»

Iron is an essential ELEMENT for blood production. About 70 percent of your BODY's iron is found in the red blood cells of your blood CALLED hemoglobin and in muscle cells called myoglobin. Hemoglobin is essential for TRANSFERRING oxygen in your blood from the lungs to the tissues.

15836.

What is the reverse process of exosmosis​

Answer»

tion:PLASMOLYSIS is the process in which cells LOSE water in a hypertonic solution. The reverse process, deplasmolysis or CYTOLYSIS, can occur if the cell is in a hypotonic solution RESULTING in a lower external osmotic pressure and a net flow of water into the cell.

15837.

___________ is production of plants in a particular or specific area​

Answer» PLANT BREEDING... i guessExplanation:PLS thank, follow and CLICK on brainliest
15838.

What is water and how are formed ​

Answer»

Mark as Brainliest answerwater is a resource and it is formed by mixing HYDROGEN and oxygen in a definite ratio2H2OI hope it helps you if yes then PLEASE please please mark as brainliest answer I need 6 brainliest answer U will GET points also for marking as brainliest answer so please please please mark as brainliest answerMark as Brainliest answer

15839.

when a drop of iodine solution put on the cut surface of a Potato it turns blue black in colour. This indicate the presence of what ?​

Answer»

Iodine TEST is PERFORMED to test the PRESENCE of starch. It turns into BLUE if starch is present

15840.

Deficiency of phosphorus can lead to anaemia true or false ​

Answer» TRUEEXPLANATION:pls THANK FOLLOW and CLICK on brainliest PLZZ
15841.

Example of leguminous plant and explain legminous plant​

Answer» RESOURCES are those RESOURCE whose quantity is known.these resources are used in present.for examplecoal and PETROLEUM in Saudi Arab
15842.

Write the main function of leucoplast​

Answer»

asalamalekum ji...here is ur answer...leucoplasts are COLOURLESS plastids ..HOPE it HELPS U

15843.

Our skin makes vitamin E in the presence of Sunlight true or false ​

Answer» TRUEEXPLANATION:it MAKE in PRESENT of VITAMIN E
15844.

Office ki makes Vitamin E in the presence of Sunlight true or false ​

Answer» FALSE EXPLANATION:because in SUNLIGHT it PRESENT VITAMIN D
15845.

Can we survive only on grass and roll leafy vegetables give reason for your answer ​

Answer»

tion:We cannot survive only on raw, LEAFY VEGETABLES/grass, because we cannot get all required nutrients, such as carbohydrates, PROTEINS, lipids, vitamins and minerals, from them. Moreover raw vegetables may not be digested EASILY as compared to cooked vegetables.hope it will help you THANKS mark me as brilliant

15846.

5. In what ways are diseases spread from person to person ( in points​ )

Answer»

* CONTAMINATED WATER* DIRTY NEIGHBOURHOOD

15847.

An animal which is an ant eater send me​

Answer» CHITA is an ANT EATING ANIMAL
15848.

Make a table of different kinds of diseases and their modes of transmission​

Answer» TION:Your answer is in the ATTACHMENT......PLZ MARK me BRAINLIEST.
15849.

Give one example of soluble?

Answer»

nd salt are EXAMPLES of soluble substancesHOPE THIS MAY HELP..

15850.

Disadvantages of using plastics​

Answer»

Plastics are harmful for the environment as it CAUSES pollution.Plastic left on the road are eaten by roadside animals like dogs and CATS, they EAT them and die.If plastic is burnt then the air is filled with polluted gas.Explanation:Hope it helps.Mark me as BRAINLIEST.