Most vertebrate animals can blink and have to blink in order to keep their eyes moisturized and clean. Some animals that can not blink are snakes and some breeds of lizards. Invertebrates generally cannot blink, often because they either have a different type of eye or because they don't have eyes.
A fly. A kestrel A hummingbird.
yes, around as often as us.
I don't know, why don't you count and then get back to us when you get the number :]
A slit on a female kitten is up and down, not sideways. Nothing is sideways. With the cat standing, lift the tail. The top dot is the anus. Then you will see the slit on a girl cat. If you see a dot not a slit, it is a boy.
yes the tree frog my brother has blinks all the time
An owl blinks one eye at a time
An owl blinks one eye at a time
There are many domestic animals that have the ability to move their jaw sideways. One of these animals is the human.
Crabs walk sideways.
Um... they close their eyes. It's the same as when any other animal blinks.
The negative space looks like tiger stripes. That's my theory.
Susan Blinks was born in 1957.
On average, a person blinks about 15-20 times per minute. Let's take the higher end and say 20 blinks per minute. In an hour, this would be 20 blinks x 60 minutes = 1200 blinks. In a day, this would be 1200 blinks x 24 hours = 28,800 blinks. In a year, this would be 28,800 blinks x 365 days = 10,512,000 blinks. Therefore, in 90 years, a person would blink approximately 945,120,000 times.
On average, a person blinks about 15-20 times per minute. Assuming an average of 17 blinks per minute, this would translate to approximately 24,480 blinks in a day (17 blinks/min * 60 min/hr * 24 hr/day). In a year, this would amount to roughly 8,939,200 blinks (24,480 blinks/day * 365 days/year).
get it checked, because if the ligt blinks, something is wrong.
can you walk sideways
A fly. A kestrel A hummingbird.