It depends what you mean. Do you mean the Homo (genus), the genus that includes modern humans and their close relatives.
Or did you mean something homogeneous? Homogeneity and heterogeneity are concepts relating to the uniformity in a substance. A material that is homogeneous is uniform in composition or character; one that is heterogeneous is distinctly nonuniform in one of these qualities.
Homogenous because when tapwater is cleaned for our safe drinking the chemicals used are little amounts and can completely dissolve into the water which therefore the same liquid is throughout all of the water and makes homgenous - homo meaning the same.
Maple syrup is not a pure substance. It is a complex mixture of sugars and other materials that provide flavor and texture, and are what is left after removing a lot, but not all, of the water from the sap of the sugar maple tree.
A homogeneous mixture is an object that has the same composure throughout. If it looks the same throughout (same colour and texture) it can be considered homogeneous. Anything that looks the same throughout can be considered homogeneous. It doesn't actually have to be the same throughout, for example, Kool-Aid is made out of sugar powder and water, so it has different particles within, although when you look at it in a glass, you only see the same thing throughout, so you would consider it homogeneous. If something has exactly the same particles though-out (pure water, sugar etc.) it is called a pure substance.
ANSWER:So many answers for this one, but... fish is a different kind of meat, in that it takes less time to cook it. If you buy cooked fish at a restaurant, it has a batter on it and is coated from one end to the other. The fish inside is tough and basically, overcooked. Some are cooked in a beer batter or egg batter, but by the time the batter on the outside cooks to perfection, the fish is overcooked and bad to the taste. I use a bread type batter, southern style. Its the best I have found so far. Take 4 parts corn meal and one part flour, mix it up real good and add 1 teaspoon of basil for flavoring. Put this on the wet fish and it will stick real good and make a good flavored batter that will make it your favourite as well.
I'm not any kind of expert, but anybody can look at the original research paper,, and see what was identified as human-like and what was identified as not like them. I go into the main details on my blog, Fundamentalist Science. The significant features tied to our genus are the general shape of the head, the small teeth, and features of the hands and feet. They mention size, too, but humans come in a wide range of sizes and so do apes. Now, on the other side is "a more primitive or australopith-like trunk, ... shoulder," and "pelvis and proximal femur." Just those alone seem to argue strongly against giving the nod to placing the critter on the human side of the equation. Everything at its core is like an ausralopithecine "ape" or non-human. What seems to put the weight on the side of "non-human" to me is the tiny size of the brain. Even the fossils assigned to our genus, such as H. erectus, have distinctly larger brains. Maybe there's some technical reason for assigning naledi to our genus, but I don't think something that is so much like an ape with human-like hands and feet makes the cut.
A homogeneous mixture is a sample of matter consisting of more than one pure substance with properties that do not vary within the sample. For example, air is a homogeneous mixture of gases. A teaspoonful of table salt stirred into a glass of water also makes a homogeneous mixture.A homogeneous mixture is one in which different constituents are uniformly mixed and that has a uniform composition throughout. Brass, for example, is a homogeneous mixture of copper and zinc. An aquaeous solution of sodium chloride is a homogeneous mixture of sodium chloride and water.A homogeneous mixture have a constant ratio of solute to solvent. Just by looking at the sample a person cannot tell the difference in the composition because it is going to be same. Air is a good example of homogeneous mixture. The composition of air would be same at any place. (78% Nitrogen, 21% Oxygen, little bit of Argon, some CO2 and other gases in very trace quantities).A combination of substances that has a single consistency ~APEXActually, a mixture is heterogeneous as it is made up of 2 or more completely different things (ie., salt and sand, or pebbles and twigs.) Compounds are homogeneous (NaCl is two different elements, but salt is salt through and through.)-a mixture that appears to be a single substance-the mixture apperars the same throughout-the pariticles of the substances in a solution are EVENLY spread out (RATION IS EXACT)the materials are evenly distributed such that you cannot distinguish one material from the other.This is a mixture where the components are thoroughly mixed and invisible as separate components.A homogeneous mixture is an object that has the same composure thoughout. If it looks the same through-out (same colour and texture) it can be considered homogeneous. Anything that looks the same though-out an be considered homogeneous. It doesn't actually have to be the same though-out, for example, Kool-Aid is made out of sugar powder and water, so it has different particles within, although when you look at it in a glass, you only see the same thing throughout, so you would consider it homogeneous.If something has exactly the same particles though-out (pure water, sugar etc.) it is called a pure substance.it is two different substances that are not easily unmixedhomogeneous mixtures are mixtures that contain the same elements.they stay the same. Think of the root word "homo" which means same.
We feed them.