The gizzard is used to manually grind and break down food and the crop stores it.
Nylon is a synthetic material, while cotton is a natural material (resource).
Theories are explanations that describe and interpret a phenomenon, often based on evidence and observations. Laws, on the other hand, are principles that describe patterns in nature, usually expressed as mathematical equations or statements. Theories aim to explain why something happens, while laws describe what happens.
Glycerol is highly soluble in water due to its hydrophilic nature, while triglycerides are insoluble in water due to their hydrophobic fatty acid tails. Triglycerides are more soluble in non-polar solvents like oils and fats.
Laws describe observed phenomena and relationships in nature, while theories explain why those phenomena occur based on tested hypotheses and evidence. Laws are more descriptive and specific, while theories are broader and provide a framework for understanding natural phenomena.
Mass is a measure of how much matter an object has. Weight is a measure of how strongly gravity pulls on that matter.
Describe is what it is and explain is why it is as it is
Describe is what it is and explain is why it is as it is
Describe refers to giving a representation in words while to explain refers to giving details, defining the structure and scope.
Explain the difference between the vassals and the serfs
Explain the difference between young and mature mountains?
explain the difference between cash and credit transaction
Explain the difference between share of customer and customer equity
what media companies provide and what advertisers are buying, and explain why there's a difference.
list & describe the 3 form of business? describe each of the 3 types (service, merchandising & manufacturing) of business operation? Explain the difference between manufacturing & merchandising?
explain the difference between systems and sub systems
explain the difference between the two types of feeding?
explain the difference between batch processing and real-time processing