Astronauts can cry tears in space. Tears will not run down your face, because there is no gravity, but they don't need gravity to form. When the tears get big enough they will break free of the eye when you blink and will float around in space forever until they freeze.
To an astronaut in a space craft, the sky appears to be black.
The most common one is "crocodile tears" which means fake tears; a crocodile is supposed to cry while eating.
none of them
An Astronaut.
an astronaut
Yes
In space, astronauts cannot cry, because there is no gravity, so the tears can't flow.
I don't know but I do know that we are primates and that we cry tears.
When you cry tears come out because of the ducts empty out your eye fluids that turn into tears.
dude! u don't get it do u!! babies cry tears!
When we cry, tears can help remove toxins from our body, but the main purpose of tears is to lubricate and protect our eyes.
cry?
No, you can cry in space the same as anywhere else. It may get messy inside a helmet.---Technically, it is more difficult to cry tears in zero gravity, since the tears are partially carried to the eye by gravity. Tears could present a problem inside a spacecraft since they would float around as tiny balls of (conductive) salty water until sopped up.
Do you mean cry tears or cry out(scream)? If a rabbit appears to have tears coming from their eyes they either have an eye infection or allergies. If you mean cry out yes they do when they are hurt or scared.
I cannot find an idiom that starts off "she cried tears." When you cry, you cry tears, so that would not be a good idiom anyway.
Cats may cry real tears but there eyes definitely water.
No, the tear ducts in newborn babies are not fully developed, so they cannot cry real tears.