Sentences with phrase «do bite humans»

Cat fleas do bite humans but since there is nowhere on us to hide (the feline flea is hugely photophobic — it runs from light as fast as it can!)
Most dogs never bite a human throughout their entire life, but unfortunately there are also dogs that do bite humans and cause serious injury.

Not exact matches

«Some of the fun stuff they've done... I think it puts a bit of a human profile to a corporation,» said Tom Turpin, Randstad Canada's president of technology and engineering, in an interview at the event.
«I got really interested in trying to understand how we could model human behavior through social media because there's residue of who we are in everything we do and here we had lots of little behaviors that we could use to try to understand a little bit more about who you are.»
Let me help Nathan out a bit... Christ, if you are a medical student as still think that the theory of evolution claims that the human body happened «randomly,» please leave school now and do not endanger people's lives.
(Can't give you the details as I'm writing a memoir and don't wish to give the good bits away in case it gets published) Even though I have doubted all the other stuff along the years — promises etc that didn't come to pass, despite my diligent prayer and obedience, I still cry out to «something out there» because I am spirit in a human body, and know that I am on a journey that has to mean more than simply this earthly plain.
These are bits of the world which may be considered as units for good human purposes, but which do not possess the unitary character of a natural moment since they are composed of such moments in external relations to one another.
It does not necessarily follow from these affirmations that all matter or all energy have in them some bits of life or protolife, or that the primordial amoeba or the primordial virus possessed some rudiments of human consciousness or some embryonic minds.
To talk about privelidge in the light of that and some very difficult expereinces both he and I have had, which as human beings, has required counselling and to undermine that issue is to do every bit as much as those women expereince who have been victims, which then experience secondary vitimisation by their difficulties being swept under the carptet.
I did disagree a bit with some of what he wrote (such as on pages 23 - 27, and 75 - 94), but really appreciated his take on Romans 1 - 7, and his view that sin is basically trying to be «more than human» which only leads us to be «less than human
True, Hook never understood that bit of data as Maritain did, or accepted the interpretation of human life that went with it, but his experience of the movement of human intellect to utter thanks remains a phenomenon to be explained.
Okay, Dad gets a bit pis sed... often... but that was the past... (well, He's gonna be pis sed in the future here soon if the FoxNews Christians get their way)... I mean really, my child, what kind of God am I if something humans do can ruffle my feathers... well, the Bird gets pretty pis sed as well... he's a puffy mess right now, actually... Somebody clean the mess of feather and poop up please... sorry... where was I...
But it does not hurt Christians one bit to be reminded that Jesus was also human.
What I do see as a bit ironic, in fact, is people who call themselves scientists ignoring the entire history of human experience so as not to have a design explanation, when every indication is that it looks designed.
Do a bit of study regarding genetic drift, population bottlenecks and the impossibility of the entire human race having come from 3 breeding pairs of humans, with all the males being 1st order relatives, a mere 4,000 years ago.
Humans do not contribute the tiniest bit to the free gift of eternal life.
@Kyle, I never suggested that I said that if research had been done in the proper fields, most rational people would question their faith I guess archaeology is bit of a stretch as it is more of a human history based field but there were civilizations more than 6000 years ago
Unfortunately, «Christian» has become a term that carries a lot of pretentiousness, so it seems to me that we might need to do a bit triage by shelving the label «Christian» if it helps us figure out what it means to be human, which may help reinvigorate the term as people see Christ in our human engagements rather than our church attendance.
I owe much of my thinking in this area to Walter Wink, but I go further than he does, and give the powers a bit of will, though it would be by the subconscious will of a human collective.
Her writing is so thoughtfully done with bits of humor that let you know she is in fact a human and not some robot that's trying to use the most flowery of words to sound smart.
well i get where you come from but i wouldnt call it less passionate but more practical, i just do nt like to be butthurt ^ ^ i am fan of arsenal to enjoy the time i spend on football but if it ends in failures i try to get over its and be constructive about it, and i am not a fan of people who cant control their anger pains and have to project their frustrations onto the people who could be held responsible but not in this scale, in my opinion of the society humans should be able to control their emotions a bit and never stoop as low as to be abusive and i do think that a lot of comments on justarsenal were abusive and sorry but i do nt think of it as passionate an extreme example would be ultras you could call them muuuuch more passionate than me but in my opinion they are just scum of football, but of course i do nt want to compare the JA - commenters to ultras xD i just tried to illustrate my opinion ^ ^
«The values are a bit of human class, distinction, respect for people and ambition to have a certain class in what you do.
Watford, westbrom, but to be honest i do nt blame losses on officials we get 90 mins to win games bit i think across the league its been poorer this year more than previous esp.linesman decisions i end up watching more than just the arsenal games but arsenal is where my heart and loyalty lies and its been week in and week across the league this year on officials i understand close offsides and fouls here and there cause football has a tremendous gray area in terms of constant action but linesman have missed multiple offsides by 5 yards and more and the consistency hasnt been there one week a call is this way next week the call is the other way but i am going to stop going on about officials as of now as you said and i agree its down human error an apart of the game
He's beating himself up in the outfield a bit, but Yasiel, friend, we're all just impressed a human being was able to cover that ground to get as close as you did.
A good debate can provoke an individual to exercise his mind a bit more, if I can raise that in people by offending them so I do not care if I offend them, better to be offended briefly and evolve as a human being than staying stubborn and ignorant, constantly upset at things which make no sense.
Well, I care a bit because I am human and don't pray for injuries to people but the Arsenal side of me just want our players to be fit after the Intl break.
Composting human waste needs a bit more attention, done improperly may spread human disease.
It was wonderful to see how the mother knew what to do for her baby, although it looks a bit rough to a human like me, lol!
While you are likely correct that humans don't always eat offal, we do eat the low quality bits of meat leftover after the slaughtering process in the product commonly known as «pink slime.»
«David Cameron and George Osborne, meanwhile, say don't worry: immigration can be slashed, human rights redrawn, taxes lowered, the NHS protected, and we can have all the benefits of being in Europe while opting out of the bits we don't like.
The sight of generous bonus payments as the deficit reduction plan bites and students face crippling university fees would do further damage to Mr Clegg's liberal credentials and play into the Labour account of his role as a «human shield» for the Tories.
As a (poor) analogy, arguing whether or not it's human - caused feels a bit like planning to develop real estate on a seaside clifftop which some specialists have said might suffer dangerous erosion in the next 70 years unless you put up some seawalls to prevent water action at the base of the cliff - and basing your view whether to build seawalls and other erosion defences upon whether or not there's proof that human activity would be the cause of any future erosion, rather than whether or not erosion is likely and if so how harmful it might be to your interests if nothing is done to reduce it.
While the evidence is a bit inconsistent, some medical researchers insist that human sperm are going downhill and have been doing so for at least a century.
«Although the venom is diluted in the much larger blood volume of a human and do not cause stroke, bite victims can still die from internal bleeding.»
As Finley Austin, Ph.D. in Human Genetics and now administrative director for the Merck Genome Research Institute, admits: «I find it a bit difficult as to how to advise someone to follow my path, since it was not what I originally set out to do
Blacklegged nymphs rarely bite humans down South, though researchers don't agree as to why not.
Their hunting done, they huddle safely in their dens, a bit like early humans around campfires.
It's very unlikely that she was infected by a bite by a mosquito that first bit her husband; the three tropical Aedes mosquito species known to transmit Zika don't live in northern Colorado, and moreover, the virus has to complete a 2 - week life cycle within the insect before it can infect the next human; Foy's wife fell ill just 9 days after his return.
This other toe — which felt every bit as much as its overstuffed human equivalent did, I should add — was attached to a 450 - pound western lowland gorilla, with calcified gums, named King.
«The good news is that camel crickets don't bite or pose any kind of threat to humans,» says Dr. Mary Jane Epps, a postdoctoral researcher at NC State and lead author of a paper about the research.
Another is that the transplanted bits of tumor act nothing like cancers in actual human brains, Fine and colleagues reported in 2006: Real - life glioblastomas grow and spread and resist treatment because they contain what are called tumor stem cells, but tumor stem cells don't grow well in the lab, so they don't get transplanted into those mouse brains.
«One has to be a bit cautious» about extrapolating the new findings to people because we don't have a way to measure neurogenesis in the live human brain, Hen notes.
«It is a reasonable question: is human influence anything to do with this nasty bit of weather we're having?»
Yet those behaviors don't remotely approach the complexity and nuance of human behaviors, and in my opinion there's not the tiniest bit of scientific evidence that chimps have aesthetics, spirituality, or a capacity for irony or poignancy.
Thus rabies does not persist in human populations because people do not bite each other even when they are infected and, in practice, in Europe, people catch the virus mainly from foxes, although contact with them is rare.
University of Wisconsin scientist, James A. Thomson, who first derived ESCs from embryos, has said «if human embryonic stem cell research does not make you at least a little bit uncomfortable, you have not thought about it enough.»
Wicker, no political naïf, brought out the big rhetorical ammo, reminding the senators that it was Jamie Thomson, the University of Wisconsin scientist who first reported isolating the cells in 1998, who said: «If human embryonic stem cell research does not make you at least a bit uncomfortable, you have not thought about it enough.»
However, extracting these miniscule bits of genes from sediment samples is easier said than done, primarily because the genes of our human ancestors make up just one tiny fraction of the vast genetic debris deposited in caves over thousands of years.
I began as a university student studying molecular genetics and molecular biology — a bit of a mouthful of a major — and went on to do a master's degree in neuroscience, and then a PhD in human genetics, all at the University of Toronto.
Think about it: Rabies is transmitted through bites (from animals, of course, not un-dead humans), and rabies symptoms, especially once the disease has progressed, do sound zombie-esque — confusion, agitation, hyperactivity, and sometimes partial paralysis.
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