The teacher in the story "Charles" by Shirley Jackson seems amused and entertained by Charles' behavior. She finds his antics and disruptive behavior in class both shocking and amusing.
Plutonium react with the majority of nonmetals; plutonium doesn't react with noble gases. Plutonium can form alloys with other metals.
It's probably a metathesis reaction, though it might be a good idea to ask your science teacher, since he or she might be looking for an answer along the lines of "precipitation" instead.
no. lead doesnot react with helium
Curium doesn't react with water.
help
Depends on what the teacher is reacting to
He seems surprised.
ask your social studies teacher
go study...
My Biology teacher said "They speed up the rate at which all parts react"
~I am still in the middle of testing this but heavy metal seems to stunt plants growth.~
If your teacher saw the paper, how do you think they they would react? I recommend pretending that teacher is your fav, and rack up some brownie points. It worked with My social studies teach, mrs. frazelle
just ask u never know what or how they will react unless you ask
Because the boy seems maladjusted and depressed, his teacher suggests that he talk with the school psychologist.
Seems to me that you'd be sure to make more money there than you would as a math teacher, but seems to me that you'd be miserable in all its other dimensions.
The rhyming scheme of the poem "My teacher wasn't half as nice as yours seems to be" by Roald Dahl is AABB. This means that the first and second lines rhyme with each other, as do the third and fourth lines.
Seems you do, don't you.But history shows that the teacher of a famous man is not necessarily as famous:Do you know Raphael? Do you know his teacher?Do you know Rembrandt? Do you know his teacher?Answers:Raphael's teacher was Perugino.Rembrandt's teachers were Jacob van Swanenburgh and Pieter Lastman.