no, large apples bruise easier. (:
6 small apples at 8 cents each equals 48 cents. 4 large apples at 13 cents each equals 52 cents. Your answer is 6 small apples and 4 large apples equal 1 dollar.
there's no difference
There are about 4 small apples, 3 medium apples, or 2 large apples in a pound.
No, a bruise or contusion is caused by direct force that breaks small capillaries. You can run into a table leg, and bruise your shin. You can fall and bruise your wrist. If the injury involves trauma or fracture, the bruising can be large and look quite ugly.
1 lb. = about 4 small apples 1 lb. = about 3 medium apples 1 lb. = about 2 large apples
No way of knowing. You would have to weigh them. As apples can be almost any size from very small to very large and lemons can vary in size from small to large, it would depend on the actual apples and lemons in question.
any horse can eat too many apples small or large if they do they will get really sick or they will get colic
A contusion is a bruise, whether tiny or huge. A laceration is a cut, whether small or large. So a lacerated contusion means a cut exists at the site of the bruising. Most cuts do bruise. The bruise can spread out in a much larger area than the cut itself. You can also get bruising after stitches to close a wound.
When we cut the skin, we cut small blood vessels called capillaries. The blood seeps into the tissues around the cut. This creates a bruise. Medically it is called a contusion. The bruise will heal as your cut heals.
Apples, as with most fruit do not have a set size. There are many varieties, each with it's own characteristic. They range from very small crab apples about 2.5cm diameter. To large baking apples which may be 15cm or more.
Apples cut into small cubes.
It is usualy easier to find mounting space for two small tanks rather that one large one.It is usualy easier to find mounting space for two small tanks rather that one large one.