No, because the cockroach would burn to death !!!
Cockroaches can be terrible pests, and even worse if there is an infestation. A cockroach would not survive being hit with a baseball bat.
depends on where he is. just like it would depend on where you were whether you would survive or not.
There is no threat to the cockroach. They would survive a atomic bomb ( the IRS right along with them)
No. It would die
Yes, but if iy was picked out of the water then thrown back in it would probably die.
cockroach
Bonfire is a noun so you would use it in a sentence as you would use a noun. A nounbeing a person, place, or THING."My mom wanted to make a huge bonfire in our yard to celebrate Christmas."
Take the bonfire set out of the toolbox, find somewhere on the grass, get out your bonfire set and press the button you would usually press if you were to use your tools which would be Z if it was the wii version.
A twinkie factory, because its one of two things that would survive a nuclear holocaust... the other being a cockroach
actually i think they are not because roaches can survive nuclear bombs so i think microwaves will be no prblem
They can survive just about anything but Raid and a shoe. They can stay under water 30 minutes, will eat anything including paper, clothing, crumbs. If a nuclear weapon went off they would probably survive that.
Not all of them survive! But they would survive better than we would. There organism - body build - is smaller than ours and therefore making us more suseptable to the radiation than the cockroach They say that a cockroach will live through a atomic bomb, but if the atom bomb was to hit the cockroach or if it were to go off above the cockroach it would did nothing will live around where the bomb goes off even a cockroach. I would like to propose what I think is a better answer from Wikipedia : Cockroaches do indeed have a much higher radiation resistance than vertebrates, with the lethal dose perhaps 6 to 15 times that for humans. However, they are not exceptionally radiation-resistant compared to other insects, such as the fruit fly.[21] The cockroach's ability to withstand radiation better than human beings can be explained through the cell cycle. Cells are most vulnerable to the effects of radiation when they are dividing. A cockroach's cells divide only once each time it molts, which is weekly at most in a juvenile roach. Since not all cockroaches would be molting at the same time, many would be unaffected by an acute burst of radiation, but lingering radioactive fallout would still be harmful http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockroach#Hardiness