yes
no but can turn into one once he is dead but slightly recovers.
"Dead Poets Society" is the name of the club that the Mr. Keating's students recreate. It was a club that Mr. Keating was once a member when he was a student at Welton Academy.
Because they were stuck in the somewhat mystical borders of the town, and once they entered, they couldn't leave.
no. They don't exist. And even if they did exist, once killed nothing can come back from the dead
Once
i don't care about it at all you stupid people i don't believe in the sort of rubbish
Well until the world ends, once its dead..its dead.
well, i don't know. Sorry friendface. Do you wash your hair more than once a month?
Most did. Some were wounded more than once. Slightly over 2700 New Zealanders died, and over 8000 Australians.
Some dogs do. We had a Labrador Retriever who would bury any bone given to him. Once I dug one up and that day he buried it again.
Pyramids were used as tombs to bury the Pharaoh once he died.
Dead rats can cause harm to humans because they spread disease. It is wise to bury or dispose of dead rats as soon as possible.
Bury him, mourn for a short while then get another puppy to bring happiness once again.
Pyramids are tombs , so the Egyptians would make them to bury there pharaohs in once they died....
You can't save it once it's dead.
Well, how in the world would people know what your will was if it wasn't written down? Once you're dead, they can't ask you, can they?
This means that he should not worry about burying his dead relative, but to do the work that the Lord had commanded him to do and let his relatives or the villagers worry about burying his dead relative. The lord is saying that all will die eventually, hence "Let the dead bury the dead".Most commentaries suggest Jesus meant, "Leave the (spiritual) dead to bury the (physical) dead" (Fitzmyer 1981: 836; Liefeld 1984: 935).In addition to its biblical context stated above it is also used my Marx in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. Marx uses it in the context of the social revolution of the 19th century. He utilizes this biblical quote to emphasize the idea that the revolution must not rely on the social models of the past in order to derive its roots, but rather must reject all past illusions (such as religion or bureaucracy) and instead build itself in the present as a modern revolution that springs forth a new system that does posses the faults of past constructs. So in a sense Marx is calling upon the new revolution to remove itself from the historical patterns that have led to the reoccurring rise of the bourgeois.In this sense "let the dead bury the dead" means let the flawed bourgeois social systems die once and for all for their repetitive flaws (let the dead just die, do not keep resurrecting them in the present social system) (Marx 1852: 595)