When you see something, light enters your eyes through the cornea and is focused by the lens onto the retina. The retina then converts the light into electrical signals that are sent to the brain via the optic nerve. The brain processes these signals to form an image of what you are seeing.
A cause is a factor or event that brings about a result or outcome. It is the underlying reason for why something happens.
"Event" is a term that best describes the phrase "something that happens" as it denotes a happening or occurrence at a specific point in time.
The word you are looking for is "cause."
A brick wall is something that you can't see through. It is solid and opaque, blocking visibility on the other side.
"Fast" is an adjective. It describes the speed at which something moves or happens.
if you have ESP you will know what happens without seeing it
Do something and then see what happens.
Experimentation means trying something to see what happens. When this is done by scientists, experiments can be complex, and very careful measurements and observations are used to learn as much as possible. Nonetheless, they are still trying something to see what happens.
because they are able to see what happens and discover something
probably something very bad, go to a doctor.
they have to get something and put it in a hand and see who has the ball first?
The answer is that the image appears on your retina
You're either mistaking something that is not the devil, or flat out hallucinating.
When you foresee something and it happens, some people call it dejávu, others may call it prophecy. Depends on your forté
Nothing happens if you see the same thing twice. People who are said to have already experienced something before it actually happened are said to be having deja vu. This means a person is doing something or seen something they feel they've already done before.
if something happens to you it oviesly matters but it depends on what happens to you on what you do.
The correct spelling is "foresee." It means to predict or anticipate something before it happens.