I couldn't see how to post a new message. I want to know what to put in EIS to
make it taste good for a 5 year old.
Thanks, Nancy
On Thursday, March 19, 2020, 05:47:28 AM PDT, Reid Harvey
<[email protected]> wrote:
Neville, I personally cannot expand beyond what you've come up with. I
wonder whether it would help to understand what viruses in general are.
Following is quoted from Merriam Webster:
Virus definition is - any of a large group of submicroscopic infectious agents
that are usually regarded as nonliving extremely complex molecules, that
typically contain a protein coat surrounding an RNA or DNA core of genetic
material but no semipermeable membrane, that are capable of growth and
multiplication only in living cells, and that cause various important diseases
in humans, animals, and plants; also : filterable virus
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 3:47 AM Neville Munn <[email protected]> wrote:
For some reason this message was not "delivered", twice, so, I deleted the
subject, now I will try again for the third time.
Man, it's soooooo hard to find anything worthwhile.
OK, I had no luck with my original question, maybe I might get better luck if I
word it differently, so, here's another question. I am over this, I can
search the Internet all day long, and STILL can't find anything useful. The
Internet is sooooo full of crap. (opinion) Maybe I can't find anything because
I don't live in the world of Academia?
Simple question requires a simple answer...YES/NO? Is this Corona thing a
SINGLE CELLED ORGANISM?
Damn it all, here's one statement I found, although I believe viruses *are*
single celled organisms, but perhaps someone can put me straight....Please, put
me out of my misery.
I even looked up the Flu, which Corona is, and I got this below...
Quote: "Answer and Explanation: Viruses are not considered living cells, and
therefore are neither single-celled nor multi-celled." End quote. WHAT
THE...? So what the hell is it then?
If it *IS*, then my original question is finally answered.
Thank You, whoever You might be <g>
N.