It comes from a time when people didn't have alot. So for someone to be surrounded by fat grandchildren was a good thing. Your kids grew up strong and healthy, had kids of their own and were able to provide so much for their children, your grandchildren, that they're fat.
The Maori word for grandchildren is mokopuna.
Many internal organs in the body are surrounded by a layer of fat for protection, including the kidneys, heart, and liver. This fat, known as visceral fat, serves to cushion these organs, insulate them, and help maintain stable body temperature. Additionally, it acts as an energy reserve and plays a role in hormone regulation.
It means further generations in the line. In many cases this refers to grandchildren or great grandchildren.
Well grandson, granddaughter, grandchild, and grandchildren all mean "Mokopuna" no matter how many grandchildren or what genda they are.
Yes, fat cells contain a single large vacuole called a lipid droplet, which stores the fat or triglycerides. This vacuole is surrounded by a thin layer of cytoplasm and organelles within the fat cell.
You could certainly use the term grands to refer to grandchildren; it could also mean grandparents, or grand pianos.
it means surrounded by crowns(:
It's mother's muscles and fat and the amniotic fluid it's floating around in.
It's the genitive of garchlann, which means "grandchildren" in Irish.
as fat... what on earth do you mean? fat is a substance.
Muscle can contain fat. In beef, we call this "marbling" because it looks something like the streaks in marble. The liver can also contain fat. I'm not sure about the kidneys, though they're often surrounded by fat.
surrounded by see