In the field, you close the patient's eye and tape an eyepatch over it, which will hopefully -- and gently immobilize the eye in order to prevent further damage. If any of the following are detected, a visit to the doctor is called for: * Mild distortion in the shape of the eyeball * Vision problems -- blindness, blurring, spots (dark or bright) * extreme pain You should consider transport to the doctor for: * Total blindness in the eye * pupilary distortion or sluggishness -- failure to dilate and constrict when exposed to light. * Serious distortion or asymetry of the eyeball. * Leaking of clear or yellow fluid fomr the eyeball (not tears). * Bleeding from the eyeball * Penetration of the sclera (the white of the eye) * Foreign particles embedded in the eye or eye socket.
The cork at the bottom of the shuttlecock is heavier, which helps stabilize its flight when it is hit upwards. When the shuttlecock starts to descend after being hit, the heavier cork naturally stays at the bottom due to gravity, providing a stable base for the feathers to slow down the descent and keep the flight consistent.
the kid hit the bull's eye yesterday
That depends on how hard you were hit, but typically, no.
In folklore: good luck.In reality: a black eye, frequently.
The eye?
A champagne cork is made up of several pieces of cork, that are grounded and glued together, like the letter T. It is shaped like a regular cork, before it is put in the bottle. The mushroom shape that you see when you open it, is a result of expansion of the cork by contact with the wine. An analogy would be a sponge that expands.
Reflex to protect your eye.
Cork comes from a cork tree :]
cork comes from a cork tree
Survivor
It all depends on how hard you got hit in the eye. If its swelling ice it and if its not then leave it alone. DON'T TOUCH IT.
cork is a type of color like brownish