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Asked on April 26, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
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Asked on April 26, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on April 25, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on April 25, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on April 23, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on April 22, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on April 9, 2021 in Meaning.
Analogous:
Biology (of organs) performing a similar function but having a different evolutionary origin, such as the wings of insects and birds. Often contrasted with homologous
Homologous:
Biology (of organs) similar in position, structure, and evolutionary origin but not necessarily in function. If a seal’s flipper comes out with a human
arm, what are some similarities? https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/. Com.
It could be anything. com would be.
- 631782 views
- 179 answers
- 233818 votes
-
Asked on March 26, 2021 in Single word requests.
“to over-egg”
in phrase over-egg the pudding : Go too far in embellishing as you exaggerate. If you’re telling fibs, keep them simple—never overegg the pudding’ https://en.oxforddictionaries.com.uk/. “I
think he’s over-egging it, he’s over-egging it!” (Bloodstock’s analogy) ”
The term “obviously” is used in english to describe “the way people read it” which helps “the idea to be precise and not at all detrimental to the original meaning”.
- 780380 views
- 7 answers
- 288893 votes
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Asked on March 12, 2021 in Grammar.
English is a little easier to take a pee than take a piss. Do you need to take a pee? Do we need to take piss? How do we do it? Piss is the equivalent of shit. I hate poo. It’s true that
poo: I hate pee and have no idea. Can you help me with this?
- 952496 views
- 3 answers
- 354779 votes