No, of course not!
Watches don't work according to whether you are dead or alive; they just keep ticking until they run out of battery or get violently damaged.
Edit:(ryon) actually as a correction to the previous answer, one thing that started that thought was wrist wound watches, that would use your body motion, and daily shifting to wind themselves up. THus if the person can no longer shift, and wind it, it would eventually stop because nothing was winding it anymore.
Stop watch and a known distance.
What would make your 1996 hyundai die when you come to a stop and try to take off?
I think the answer is Timer and stop watch
if there heat would stop beating
no, because if you did you would die
They do not stop swimming, if they did they would die.
Die is the Hebrew word for enough.Actually, Die would be translated "Stop"while "Enough" would be maspeek.But it is common to hear someone say, "Die, maspeek!" (Stop, enough!)
It's just said meaning that it does not actually stop when you die. When watches were invented they were very valuable and and a mark of a success. It was extremely dear to the owner. Traditionally a boy received his watch when he turned 18 or whenever he became a man traditionally from a parent figure. He would keep that watch for the rest of his life, and when he died it would be buried with him. Till the 1970's there was a tradition that when a person dies you turn off his watch and bury it in the casket with him. Thus that's where the saying comes from.
you would stop breathing and die. after a few days you would get cold and your insides would explode
No if you watch the new season you would know
Its battery could die and the engine would stop running. Or a cable plug could have been unplugged and the car would stop, the only real reason it would do this is that the car would hit a large bump or halt at a sudden stop.
Probably not, and if it did, we would all die.