tape the window shut
Depends on the plant, and how much sunlight is coming through the window.
keep the window closed! if that doesn't work you got a weird cat
Light coming through unfiltered/untinted glass is Direct sunlight. Light coming through shade/screen/curtains, etc, is Indirect.
You can, but it will only waste power trying to heat all the hot air that's coming in through the window.
When baby window spider is born they eat there father alive.
Backlighting is light coming from behind the subject. For example, a person inside a room standing in front of a window during the daytime. The strong daylight coming through the window is greater than the light falling on the person from the camera side. If the exposure is set for the amount of light coming through the window the person will be a silhouette. If the exposure is set for the person the window area will be greatly overexposed (called "blown out") and will likely bleed into the subject around the edges.
*The black WIDOW spider is, not the black window. that doesn't exist! LOL
It most certainly could. Example: "The paper hanging on the wall was blown down by the wind coming through the open window" means "The paper hanging on the wall fell down because of the wind coming through the open window" Hope I helped:)
The process involved is 'phototrophism' or 'phototrophic movement' .
Spider mites come in the windows from the grass. You can get rid of them without spraying. Just put laundry softner cloths on your window sills and they cannot crawl through into your house. The cloths stop them and kill them.
EASY - Do the window up - Duck tape it - move seats or any other common sense
Do you mean "coming to" or "coming through"? If you mean "coming to your windows" then you probably mean the pecking behavior that territorial birds exhibit when they confuse their reflection in the window as an adversary. In this case, you need to make it so the bird doesn't see its own reflection in the window. I'm sure you can think of some ways to do that. If you mean "coming through your open windows" then the only effective way to stop birds from flying through an open window is to close the window or install a screen (which also deters insects from invading). If you mean "flying into your closed window" and this is a common problem, then birds in quick flight incorrectly discern the window to be an open space. (You ever walk into a closed glass/screen door?) Make the window more noticable. One popular technique is to decorate your window with something that can be easily spotted from the outside. If you don't want to decorate your window, try placing items near the windows. This will block the access to the window as well as cause the item to appear in the reflection of the window. A window box with flowers "kills two birds with one stone" in that it is pretty from the inside, and doubly pretty when the window reflects the beautiful flowers.