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Shakespeare spoke English so of course most of the words he used are still in use today. If you are talking about words that we have no record of anyone using before Shakespeare did, "puking" and "assassination" come to mind.
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 'MACBETH AND THE THREE WITCHES'
Shakespeare came up with no conjunctions. They were all a part of the language long before he came along.
He achieved the creation of plays whcih come to life.
The sound of a heart beat is caused by the closing of the valves in the heart.
The bullet kills your brain, which controls your heart, and the heart stops beating.
Because that is where his heart stopped beating.
Death is medically defined as cesation of the heart beating. Once the heart has stopped beating, you have between 2-6 minutes to get the heart restarted before mild to severe brain damage occurs. During this time, performing CPR can stave off the effects to some extent. In other words, if a person has a heart attack and their heart has stopped, performing CPR on the downed person will sustain the brain getting the necessary oxygen to stay alive as well the allow the heart to perfuse or send blood to vital organs throughout the body. However if the heart is not able to be restarted during this time, then the person is dead. So to Answer the question, if someone is "down" for 20 minutes, with their heart stopped, and it is restarted, there is an extremely high probability of irreversible brain damage/persistent vegetative state. In other words, they are brain dead and not alive even though their heart is still beating. So . . . NO a person cannot live again after their heart has been stopped for 20 minutes.
Shakespeare's pen.
The expression does not come from Shakespeare.
Both before and after. There have been Greeks for over 3000 years, and there still are millions of them. Aristophanes and Alexander the Great came before Shakespeare; Nana Mouskouri and Nia Vardalos came after.
Not very much. It tells the brain nothing about the blood, such as oxygen state, or how fast it is beating. However, pain can be transmitted to the brain from the heart when the heart doesn't, for example, have enough oxygen. This information is quite non-specific, though, explaining why pain from the heart in a heart attack can appear to come from the arm or jaw.
Shakespeare spoke English so of course most of the words he used are still in use today. If you are talking about words that we have no record of anyone using before Shakespeare did, "puking" and "assassination" come to mind.
Easy question, the faster the blood flows, the faster you come to dieing. Also, if you have noticed your heart beating really fast, you most likely have cancer.
Macbeth :)
the heart does not generate feelings it just pumpes blood and is the organ who everyone says stuff about love... it is a chemical but you can still refer it to the heart as 99.9% of the world does