who was the first person to fold origami
Make two origami chairs and glue/tape it together. That's how you make a ugly couch!
First make a boat, then make two birds. For the boat fold a peice of paper in half, fold the edges and you have a boat! The birds can just be two cranes, heads together. Hope this helps. ;P
easy first you get a rectangle piece of paper then fold top two corners together and fold in half then unfold and tadah JK
There are quite a few ways to make an origami Pegasus horse. One is to find a book and follow the directions.
There's 4 steps to doing this: 1. Buy two origami birds from ebay, and desired boat. 2. Apply glue to the bottom of each bird. 3. Firmly stick the two origami birds onto the base of the boat. 4. Enjoy the time you didn't waste trying to make origami, and enjoy the confidence you didn't bludgeon to death.
Below is a related link to a video tutorial on how to fold an origami tank .
origami originates from japan. the name origami comes from two words...oru, meaning fold and kani, meaning paper! there u go! ORUKANI-ORIGAMI!
an awesome origami website is called "Origami instructions". It shows how to make animals, mystical creatures such as the dragon, and extinct animals like the dinosaurs. it can be for kids, beginners, and professionals. i made an awesome dragon from easy instructions. and when you are ready for an expert level you can look for a difficult dragon or go to you-tube.com and search up "Origami two headed dragon for all different kinds of dragons. you can also search up on you tube for mystical creatures. I highly recommend these. ;)
'oru', meaning 'folding', and 'gami', meaning 'paper'.
Normally the pronoun for the person spoken to (the second person) comes first. However, it is not incorrect to use the third person pronoun first.Examples:You and she make a good pair.You two make a good pair. (an alternate use of the second person)She and you did well.You both did well. (an alternate)
______ was the first person to use a two-kingdom system of classification.
The two-kingdom system of classification was first proposed by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century. He classified organisms into two kingdoms: Plantae and Animalia based on their mode of nutrition.