Some white things are:
marshmallows, weddings, whipped cream, snow, white sugar, truce flag, paper, clouds, pearls, tissues, milk, igloo, teeth, swan.
If you have no other issues, it is normal to have little white specks, and/or a stringy white discharge in your urine. Fat deposits (tiny white lumpy things) are normal. Urinating is a means of discharging waste from the body, and all of the above is common.
white blood cells, red blood cells, plasma cells and platlets.
White blood cells, specifically phagocytes, are responsible for eating and digesting foreign particles, such as bacteria and viruses, in the body. This process helps to protect the body against infections and pathogens.
White blood cells release interferons to attack viruses. Interferons are signaling proteins that help to enhance the immune response by interfering with viral replication.
Blood consists of plasma, red blood cells, and white blood cells. The red are for transporting oxygen, and the white are for killing things that should not be in the blood. The plasma is 55 % of the blood. The plasma is there for moving things that are not gonna be used anymore, like C02 urin, and milkacid.
These are things that can be white:kiteknightlightsprite
Because they ARE white?!?
white
Answers.com theme Green and white :)
There are no such things as white kangaroos or kabgaroos.
no there are no such things as white vultures. there are some that have white and are called white-backed vultures.
they are called white spinners
GO TO THE DOCTOR IMMEDIATELY! YOU MIGHT HAVE LEPROSY! ~unless the white things you are referring to are your fingernails. In that case, go to a store immediately and quickly buy some clippers. Those will cure your white things.
Those white things in the sky happen to be stars which are balls of gasses, or they could be planets.
The fuzzy white things are fungus, they are eating the dead tissue of the fish.
Ride the Acro Bike and do bike jumps to cross over the white things.
The white fuzzy things floating in the air are typically pollen, dust, or other airborne particles.