Well, here's a very basic explanation. An image enters your pupil, which is basically a big hole in your eye. The image is transported through a tube and sent to your brain upside down. The brain flips it so it's right-side-right, and then sends it back to your eye, and there's the image!!
Then you don't get to see your dogs eye. AHOLE
Just like the aperture on a camera, your pupil dictates how much light is let into your eye. So when you shine a light in your eye your pupil gets tiny, and in the dark your pupil gets large to let as much light in as possible so you can see better.
Nothing. He just says he's sorry.
If by interact you mean merely see and be seen, then, yes, all zoos have animals you can interact with. However, there will always be some animals in every zoo that you can see, but they cannot see you. Usually, these are smaller, non-mammal creatures in small glass enclosures with special lighting that would be disturbed by your presence. If you mean touch, then the answer is absolutely "NO".
Google Maps will let you see an bird's eye view of your house and Zillow lets you see pictures and the approximate value of your house.
If you "see eye to eye," then you both see the same thing, or you agree. If you don't see eye to eye, then you don't agree.
brian
Their eye lids protects their eyes. Beavers eyes let them to see both underwater and on land.
See and LOOK! Looking!!! Look, see, whatever else the eye can do, those are the functions of the eye
We see out of the eye because of the light that's hits the eye and the light that we see it sends a signal to the brain and then we can see the picture.
No. You cant see it with your bare eye. I have it and you cant see it.
brian goes on the plane to see his father in canada