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watching dust-mites under a microscope sounds like fun.
why not buy one? they are cheap.
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i had a teacher that laughed everytime she said "seno de teta" (sine of thetha) which in spanish means "boob of the tit"
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where can i watch all of that lecture?
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OOOOHHHHHHHH GOOOOOOOOOOODDD!!!!!! get em off me!!!get em off me!!!
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I would like one of them chocolates :p
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I purposely try to forget these kinds of things.
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oooh, good question...
never thought of that
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'Even fleas have smaller fleas that bite 'em,
And so it goes ad infinitum' Demodecs are microscopic bugs that clean up dead skin flakes. If there are too many demodecs on a dogs skin they start 2 eat healthy tissue as well as dead. This is what is known in dogs as demodectic mange, resulting in fur loss, itching and if untreated can be a serious health risk from 'invisible bugs' which live on all mammal skin. Humans have the same sort of bugs too of course.
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Realizing that we are each a walking symbiotic universe to so many 'citizens' should make each of us, as the professor stated, feel less alone. Of course, while some of those citizens actually keep us alive, others are amusing parasites. Reminds me of the universe upon which WE live and I'm trying to decide if I am the first citizen or the second! Becky
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Oh, all primates and almost all other large animals have this sort of relationship with some sort of really tiny creature. Changing sleeping locations every night reduces their sheer numbers, but the fact is that a lot of them actually cling to you and animals with fur are a lot easier to cling onto. Dust mites that specialize on humans are less clingy than most though since they don't have to worry about being left behind.
I wish I had chocolates with trigonometric integrals on them.
catapaultpenguin 3 years ago 7
It's not only chocolates with trigonometric integrals, it's belgium chocolates with trigonometric integrals...
Huge difference.
DeletedDelusion 3 years ago 4