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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:01enough
00:01Oh, my friend, the monastery of Na'aya
00:03We lived a beautiful life together
00:05actually
00:07Life was very harsh.
00:08A normal life
00:09The food market says so
00:10But we saw walls that no one had ever seen before.
00:12Berlin Walls
00:13Images of the great tooth
00:15I also remember when
00:17My beloved was stolen from me
00:18Yes
00:20That's it
00:20Why are you saying that?
00:21Food after what I said
00:23Add another wall or more pictures
00:25The psychological completed
00:26The year that betrayed
00:28Second, O Montaser
00:29Did you tell people where you were?
00:32And you're the one who took Abeer
00:33And I tore it on a piece of ceramic
00:35It didn't happen
00:36It didn't happen
00:37Piece of mosaic
00:39Don't change the subject, Adel
00:41You and I both understand perfectly well what I'm talking about.
00:43And Egypt
00:44Your divorce was superficial from the start.
00:46Of course
00:47Where else would you meet but on flat surfaces?
00:49Victorious
00:49Abeer, for me, is not just a passing fancy.
00:53Don't make excuses, Adel
00:54You are a climber
00:56She took advantage of my kindness and generosity.
00:59And my ignorance of the inner workings of things
01:01To reach Abeer
01:02Oh, Victorious, I am
01:04I love him
01:05And I'm the one who told people about your location
01:07Hello my friend
01:11And you too, you're a YouTube sensation, huh?
01:13Ignite
01:15Hello my love
01:15Victorious
01:18Victorious
01:22Victorious
01:23no
01:24no
01:25no
01:34Ignite
01:34Dear
01:35I ignite
01:35Oh, right
01:35Hello everyone, welcome to a new episode
01:36From Ramij Al-Dahih
01:37Abu Hammad
01:38Do you know what the name of the stock exchange is?
01:39What is it, my dear?
01:39The stock exchange...
01:41Okay, my dear...
01:41In this episode, my dear
01:43Or Abu Breis in 2022, issued by the Israeli Nature and Parks Authority
01:48Warning post about Jay's threat of madness
01:51What kind of invasion are they leading, my dear? The Egyptian stock market
01:54What's up, Abu Ahmed?
01:56The discussion, my dear, was about it being an aggressive species that poses a threat to crops.
02:00By God's will, he's just like you, he eats anything in his path
02:03Even if they are the size of a jerboa
02:05We'll tell you, my dear, that the environmental protection agency there is laughable; anyone who sees the Egyptian stock market...
02:09He photographs it and reports its location, but Egyptian scientists like Dr. Ali Younes from Cairo University
02:14It is useful to know that borax can cause this effect.
02:17But according to him, the environment system is very important.
02:20In fact, it also provides them with a service because, for example, it eats the insects around the houses and crops.
02:24Life, my dear, this multiplicity is open to many interpretations
02:27It could simply be an organism existing in an environment that isn't its own.
02:30They're just like you'd say, Insecure
02:32But that, my dear, doesn't prevent us all from having thought about one question.
02:35Our regular stock exchange did all this.
02:37Mubdan, my dear, the intended Egyptian stock market
02:39It's not the same stock market we're used to.
02:41But a powerful lizard, larger than a house boar.
02:43Its international name is Tarentula Annulers
02:45This is a port that lives in the Nile Valley and the southern Delta.
02:48And parts of the Eastern and Western Deserts
02:50And my dear, it exports tens of thousands of them every year to all countries of the world as a pet.
02:55A house said to him, "Why is it a big lizard, Abu Hamad?" They said, "Why is it called a 'burs'?"
02:58If it's the same as the original, then it's Bors.
03:00The Bors doesn't earn a single yuan; it's merely a subset of the lizards.
03:04Their name is geckos
03:05Yes, the bores are lizards, like the iguana and the chameleon.
03:08Lizards generally belong to the most diverse group of terrestrial vertebrates.
03:13A group called the scaly ones
03:15This, my dear, is a collection that includes snakes and lizards.
03:25From the smallest nano-chameleon to the dragon-like liver, the largest lizard on Earth
03:30The one with the head is now a branch of the lizards
03:32This branch includes more than a thousand species classified into six or seven different families.
03:36For example, the type of pigs we see in homes in Egypt is called "house pigs".
03:41It also has more than one type, such as Port Sinai and Port Red Sea.
03:44The continuous Mediterranean bourse and the yellow duck bourse
03:46And Hamad, why did I see green and blue colors in the pictures?
03:49Why does our stock exchange look so disgusting?
03:51Life is dear to me because the porcupine is both predator and prey.
03:54He feeds on God in small villages, and at the same time, he has a sweet inclination towards the young and the tired.
03:59The body of the porcupine is designed to hunt and prevent others from hunting it; it has different uses.
04:03Perhaps the most important aspects are secrecy and funding.
04:05For example, the one at the top of the greenery, you'll find it living in the forests.
04:07On the island of Madagascar, we see a type called the papery borosiform.
04:10This, my dear, comes in 22 varieties.
04:13This is divided into two categories: one that imitates the leaves of trees and one that imitates the leaves of trees.
04:18The type shown in these pictures, for example, when it wants to relax, it sleeps in the heart of the forest.
04:21All he has to do is curl up and sleep on a tree trunk.
04:24And that's impossible to see him, and when he wants to hunt, he gets out of his sleeping position.
04:27And he roamed freely in the forest
04:29Camouflage, my dear, means that our porcelain takes on the color of the environment.
04:32This could make it a creature with unusual colors.
04:34And sometimes it is exquisite and beautiful, like a Van Gogh painting. Who is this Bouhmil?
04:38Our stock
04:41This
04:42This year, in 2020, scientists in South India discovered this borosilicate.
04:45And they will call him, my dear, Namaste Van Gogh
04:47Why is that? Because its colors are bright yellows and blues, similar to Vango's Starry Night painting.
04:52This beautiful design is because this species is nocturnal, hunting at night and living among the rocks.
04:56And the forests are flooded from it
04:58So, as you might say, this helps him to blend into his environment.
05:01But the types found in the Middle East
05:02It is usually brown or yellow in color.
05:05So that you can adapt to the desert environment
05:07And also so that she can withstand the heat
05:09Why? Because lighter colors reflect more heat.
05:11Not only that
05:12According to a study published by the Texas Academy of Sciences in 2007
05:15The Mediterranean Sea port that is found in most homes
05:17When he has the ability, he can change the color of his skin.
05:19In response to the surrounding background
05:23If you place it on a background with an opening, it will appear in a light pink color.
05:26If you place it on dark backgrounds, it will appear in a darker color, like brown.
05:29And Abu Habid doesn't live in magic, and what brings him to the houses?
05:32What's it to me and my family?
05:32It means the bakery enters homes to speed up the cooking process.
05:34And the insecticides also get involved, disrupting their livelihood.
05:37Fatvin
05:37Why does this stock exchange keep entering our house?
05:39The benzyl bore, my dear, is a type of animal that has benefited from human civilization.
05:43Exactly like a baker
05:44Where do you meet humans? You meet bakers and you meet bosses.
05:46Especially if there are plants and greenery nearby.
05:48Boras targets insects that are attracted to house lights.
05:51Its prey includes cockroaches, flies, gnats, beetles, butterflies, ants, and snails.
05:57This is an insect habitat
05:58He likes to be in places where he can't be cornered.
06:01For example, the longing, or the mad places, or on the balcony
06:04What helps with this is that most boar species are nocturnal animals.
06:07It is active at night and rests during the day.
06:09Its most active hour is 2 AM.
06:13Even if, my dear, the sound of a mother's nest is like the crackling of a bird's clatter or the chirping of a sparrow
06:18Notice that this is something that distinguishes the boar from other lizards: it has a voice.
06:22And this sound varies from type to type
06:23Some types peck, some types chirp, and some types bark, whoosh whoosh.
06:27For example, in Burs Tokai, who lives in South Asia
06:30When, my dear, the Americans heard his voice in Vietnam, they thought
06:33The original Sokai are being attacked.
06:36Why? Because he says up, up, up
06:38So they thought this was an attempt by the Vietnamese to tell them
06:42After my dear, I saw the post on the wall and bent down to get my slippers.
06:46You went to look for him and found he had disappeared.
06:47Why, my dear, is it not a magic thread, but rather something very fast?
06:50Although it's no longer than 15 centimeters
06:52However, this one had an extraordinary speed with which he could run on any type of terrain.
06:57The wall of the tree, ice, doesn't make a difference to his mother.
07:00Let me tell you that some species can run on water
07:03And what about its speeds on Earth?
07:04Insects, for example, like water, rely on surface tension.
07:07Surface tension is a property of the liquid's surface.
07:10By making it the tower of the nation, the external power
07:12Because the molecules of liquid water have a degree of homogeneity.
07:16The membrane that instantly transforms into a flexible membrane
07:19It is capable of carrying creatures of certain weights.
07:22Like who? Like the insect I'm talking about
07:23My dear friend, the idea is that the stock exchange is, excuse me, large.
07:26It is also smaller than birds like the western grebe
07:28The one who runs on water with the force of a slap
07:30It means he's hitting the water with his feet.
07:32According to a research paper in the journal Current Biology
07:34The Asian house pos uses four tricks to run on water
07:38Firstly, its skin is hydrophobic, so it repels water from it.
07:47And at the same time, my dear, he's waving his tail in the same way as a crocodile.
07:51So that he can appear in front of me
07:52Also, my dear, when the researchers decided to change the surface tension of the water
07:56They put soap on it
07:57No, the one with the head speed is half the price.
07:59So somehow, the thing in the head closes the surface tension of the water.
08:03So you can run to him
08:04We'll get back to you, my dear.
08:05He said, "My dear, if you see him..."
08:07I quickly grabbed my slipper and hit the wall with it.
08:09Of course, we all know what happens next.
08:11You hit it and imagine that you're going to cut off its tail
08:13And his country prefers to play in front of you and your sister is doing
08:15And your mother softens, announcing the granary
08:17And she says, my dear, family is better than nothing.
08:18The people of Nass Nasr, at least, suffered injuries.
08:21That's right, my dear, the stock exchange is ignoring both of us.
08:23The porcelain is the reason his tail was cut off.
08:25Not with the complaint
08:26Many lizards, including the bores
08:27I mastered the art of predatory escape.
08:29And the lizards or the ones with the big breasts, for example
08:31They advise that you don't remove the stock from its tail
08:33Because it will cut off where you hold it and come down without it.
08:36He certainly won't cut the whole deal.
08:37But it will cut off just beyond the spot you're holding.
08:39Because, my dear friend, purity is beneficial to the stock market, as you can see.
08:42He helps him and swim
08:42Besides, of course, it's important for balance and movement.
08:44It also stores fat, like a camel's teeth.
08:47His handkerchief is like a toilet tissue.
08:49It has open lines that you can cross at a point of your choosing.
08:51And its tail contains complex lines.
08:53Bebelag and socket ready for disconnection at any moment
08:56These lines pass through
08:57His fat, his muscles, and even his spine
08:59This allows him to separate his paragraphs
09:01From different places in the column
09:03If you hold its tail at the end, a small piece will separate from it.
09:05He grabbed him by the text, cutting the text.
09:07Cutting the deal is not the last defensive tactic for the stock market.
09:10Because, my dear, after this deal, it's going to break.
09:12The workers start dancing
09:19The predator remained, away from the stock market and the lizard.
09:21Everyone is busy with something.
09:23And the workers are watching, now they're playing the stock market game.
09:25And the stock market kept running, running, running
09:27And the people are focused on the work.
09:29And Betzock and the stock exchange are running, running, running
09:31Running, running, running
09:31Also, my dear, the stock market is very economical.
09:33Meaning, if the predator doesn't bite the tail
09:36Or you took this deal and threw it in the trash.
09:38The boss will go back and eat it himself
09:40What? One year is enough, it's free.
09:41All the transactions, my dear, happen without the stock exchange shedding any blood.
09:45And all of it is a few hairs and a new tail grows.
09:47He begins to adopt a new bone-knitting technique.
09:49Then the muscles and skin come in to cover it.
09:51Come on, honey, none of this is impressive.
09:53As much as we need to know about the stock exchange
09:55And we'll get over it
09:56Bores, my dear, if you thought and reflected
09:59You'll find that he walks on the wall
10:00Aristotle's history of animals was dazzling for the same reason.
10:03He can climb and move from tree to tree in any direction.
10:06He said no, and in which hand, Abu Ahmad?
10:07The squirrels are climbing trees normally.
10:10What's unique about the Boris is that it can climb any vertical surface.
10:14Even on the roof, the son of a gun walks upside down
10:17It defies all laws of gravity.
10:19She has no need for anything
10:20This surface is wet dry glass
10:23They're all the same
10:24The difference is that it does so differently from most climbing animals.
10:27For example, the gecko secretes a mucous substance that sticks its body to the wall.
10:31Squirrels grip wood with their strong claws.
10:34The octopus has sugars on its arms.
10:36It secures itself to surfaces using suction power.
10:38Even the bow has tiny claws that help it to grasp anything on the surface.
10:43But my dear, if the Chinese man were next to Boris's legs
10:45We'll pick it out, but it won't turn out to be a trustworthy material.
10:47He said, "No claws, no suckers, none of those things. So how does it cling on?"
10:52Because if he were to rely on his muscles, it would cost him a lot of energy.
10:54But actually, the stock can stand in this position.
10:57She hangs like that from the ceiling for hours
10:58So, my dear, there's nothing else besides his muscles.
11:01That's what makes it stick well to the wall.
11:02He had a good mask and was able to walk.
11:04If it's something that sticks
11:05What is on the water, what will undo it, remains a difficult matter for him to put his hand in
11:10correct?
11:10He can run quickly along the wall, but at the same time he is stuck to the wall.
11:13Scientists have long since discovered that the porrus has something like sticky pads on its fingers.
11:18These pillows help him climb surfaces.
11:20But she's helping him, as we only recently learned.
11:22If we look at the leg of the bosom, we will find it consists of horizontal strips with grooves between them.
11:27Under a regular microscope, something resembling fingerprints appears.
11:30But we need to suck on a more precise level.
11:32Not with a regular microscope
11:33But with an electron microscope, we can see the fine structure that helps it adhere to surfaces.
11:39We see in each man of the Mars about half a million hairs
11:43These logos, my dear, are more precise than a human hair. What is their name?
11:46Each of these logos branches out into hundreds of smaller logos at the end.
11:50And at the end of each of our slogans, we have small, flat ends, my dear, almost spoon-like ones.
11:54We call it Spatulas
11:55This is the one that sticks to the roof
11:57Okay, Muhammad, excuse me, how do you hold it?
11:59For many years, scientists thought this was related to shift force or capillary force.
12:04But the strange thing, my dear, is that even if the porcupine dies, it still holds on, it remains attached with the same strength as if it were alive.
12:09Biologist Keller Ott says that there was a burse in his lab that died
12:13And this is one of the biggest types, my dear, he says that after he died, he hung on one leg all day
12:19If they weren't afraid that the dead porridge would smell, they would have left it like that for a longer time.
12:22Therefore, the logos on the foot are stuck in a lifeless way.
12:26It does not rely on any type of muscle stimulation.
12:28The borosilicate material physically adheres to surfaces.
12:31The microscopic logos in the Bors man help and adhere at the nanometer level.
12:34It means parts per billion of a meter.
12:37At this level, a different power takes control.
12:40The porcupine is able to climb because these small logos actually touch the surface.
12:44This is something rare, my dear, it doesn't happen.
12:46When you touch something, don't touch it, Ziabou Ahmed
12:49You can't reach it, my dear, there's no complete contact between you and this thing.
12:52There are gaps between them, so at the micro level we almost don't touch anything.
12:57Azizi's guy gives Boris a special kind of power of attraction
13:00It's similar to the magnetic attraction force between negative and positive charges.
13:03Due to a strange phenomenon, the size is obtained
13:06For example, my dear, if we go down to the level of atoms
13:08You will find chloride ions that carry a negative charge
13:11Sodium ions, which carry a positive charge, attract each other.
13:14The difference is that the man from the stock exchange has no charge.
13:16And also the surface he is standing on
13:17Lahman, Betinila, and Anjazabu, some of them, Al-Zib and Hamid
13:20Seriously, my dear, you might have stuck it in your science textbook.
13:23Her name is Vanderville Force
13:25The buttons that are in the leg of the porcelain
13:26The particles that form the surface of the glass
13:28It contains a positive nucleus and negative electrons.
13:31This solves the problem of the atom itself having no charge.
13:33Because the atom has the same number of negative electrons
13:35Positive protons in the atmosphere of the nucleus
13:37But because our electrons are always moving
13:40What happens is that sometimes the electrons can be found on one side
13:44More than one other aspect
13:45Like this, the planets revolve around the sun
13:46It's possible that the rotational teeth of the sun would reveal many planets clustered more closely on one side than on another.
13:52The idea is that the side with more electrons has a negative charge.
13:56Why? Because the electron has a negative charge and it's a type of electron that works in a stack like that.
14:01So, the workers have a slight negative charge.
14:03The other side of the corn
14:05The other side of the nucleus has a slight positive charge.
14:08This dear one creates a heavenly state, just like a magnet.
14:12This force causes neighboring molecules to attract each other, like what? Like water molecules, for example.
14:17These molecules line up side by side so that the spots on the molecule that have a negative charge
14:22The part with the positive charge corresponds to the molecule next to it.
14:25Of course, this attraction is not itself the force of the charged particles.
14:29But if you're praying to the Prophet like that, you'll have a lot of them, and they'll start to have an effect on me.
14:33And that, my dear, is the secret of the stock market.
14:35The porcelain has more than a billion adhesive points on its surface.
14:38My dear, that's the idea behind what we said about each of my legs having half a million hairs.
14:42And at the end of each hair, there are hundreds of hairs.
14:44If the bore were on the ground, its weight might be given by one Newton downwards.
14:48Each bar of the borosilicate glass leg can provide a surface attraction force of less than one millionth of a newton.
14:53Of course, with this kind of talk, you'll say, "Oh, how wonderful, Abu Hamad! Well, that's how the stock market will collapse!"
14:58In Tikrit, my dear, the Bors has more than a billion hairs on his toes.
15:02Therefore, these hairs are able to provide enough strength to support the weight of this body.
15:07Once the body's strength is between the buttons
15:09My dear, it can stick to almost any surface, even one-sided.
15:12Do you know what it is?
15:13The sound of the spit
15:14The texture of the Teflon coating prevents the porcelain from sticking to it.
15:18Want to know why? I'll list it in the sources.
15:19You tell me, "This is your time, sleep."
15:28That way he can point his leg to take the next step
15:30Bors, my dear, organizes millions of capillaries using his muscles and the tendons in his leg.
15:34By simply changing the angle at which the hairs touch the surface
15:39This force disappears in a fraction of a second
15:41But small for the angel
15:42Hamad, excuse me for asking.
15:43When I come to pick up my Surah Al-Tab
15:45And stick it once
15:46I'm carrying it
15:47And stick it again
15:47Every time I remove it and stick it back on
15:49I've noticed that the adhesive's strength is decreasing.
15:51Does this happen at the stock exchange?
15:53Does the adhesive on the porcelain decrease in strength over time?
15:55no
15:55The fingers of the Bors don't lose their strength over time.
15:58Regardless of how much it sticks and leaves
16:00Even if we remove it, they will grow back.
16:02What helps with this, my dear, is that the porcupine is small in size.
16:04It cannot grow beyond a certain size.
16:06Because every time he grows older, there's something else.
16:07The more the mass is multiplied by the surface area, the greater the surface area.
16:10The one that sticks to the wall
16:11In a brilliant analogy, Kouim played on the beloved Kafr El-Sheikh radio station.
16:15The boar is an animal that, when you chase it away, you feel like it's chasing you away.
16:17Is this really his right?
16:18You're disgusted by the stock market and you still want to get rid of it.
16:20At the same time, he's terrified of him and afraid he'll attack you.
16:22This could be part of the disgust
16:24It comes from the nature of the Islamic or viscous body of the Bors.
16:27From a biological perspective, we, my dear, are repelled by sticky things.
16:30Because it is bound to decomposing organic matter
16:33And entities that can be harmful, such as worms and snails.
16:36Disgust may be instinctive, protecting us from disease.
16:38But it could also be a ridiculous product
16:40For many years, scientists assumed that disgust was an instinctive feeling.
16:43It prevents us from eating or getting close to anything harmful.
16:45They also assumed that early humans
16:47Those who were susceptible to disgust from diseases
16:49They estimated that they would survive until they passed on their genes.
16:51Unlike people who were stepping on anything
16:53What strengthens this viewpoint is that during the coronavirus pandemic
16:55People who were exposed to disgust during that period
16:58Their situation was better because they washed their feet
17:00They clean themselves a lot
17:01Disgust is a fundamental aspect of our behavioral inhibition system.
17:04But it's also related to things, my dear.
17:06Which we are not used to because of our upbringing
17:08Social issues and our vulgarity, for example
17:09New foods that might be beneficial to our health
17:11In some cultures, locusts and insects
17:13An important source of protein, it includes other cultures that include it, such as
17:16The stock market status if you search on Google in English
17:18There is fear of or disgust with the porcelain.
17:20Or, if you look at him with gray hair, you won't find him.
17:22You'll find someone to take care of it like a pet.
17:24This is related to our cultural influence.
17:26Towards this stock
17:27I'm here, my dear. Didn't I say I paid the loan?
17:28But it reveals deeper reasons for disgust in general.
17:31Bors, my dear, is not poisonous in any way.
17:33As proof, my dear, he cleans his eye with a human.
17:35Because most babes don't have real eyelids
17:38He is a single eye socket.
17:39They lick it every now and then to clean and moisturize it.
17:42If his saliva were poisonous, he wouldn't have acted like that.
17:43Also, my dear, he changes his skin every now and then.
17:45And then, my dear, he eats what he signs.
17:47The skin of the pupil has pores in large and medium-sized species.
17:50The one who is able to bring the person back
17:52And her skin is pierced by her slave, who is not Sam.
17:54Even the stock market has a strange defensive strategy at play.
17:56The defense method is to let the person who's messaging tonight go.
17:58Those who eat during the day
17:59When a predator gets close, it raises its tail.
18:02And he started spraying liquid on him.
18:03Just like the big one sprays its name
18:05But this liquid is not toxic.
18:06This is just a sticky liquid with a bad smell.
18:09Some animals are susceptible to infections.
18:11The predator says to you, "Oh my God!"
18:12Hassan, the killer poison remains far away from him.
18:14Actually, my dear Bors, it's possible to have a guest animal.
18:16In a study conducted by a group of researchers at James Cook University
18:19On a Bors of the type shown in this picture
18:20They discovered that boar skin cleans itself.
18:23The water droplet that is shy on the body of the porcelain
18:25It jumps off like popcorn
18:27And she's jumping around, like you'd say.
18:28It generates energy to clean the dirt on it.
18:31The water-paying frying pan is available on
18:32Insect wings
18:33So that the dewdrop that falls on it is propelled like this
18:36From the surface of its wings, the wings prefer dryness.
18:38And it works well
18:39Secondly, my dear, I'm not saying you should welcome the stock exchange and say "Welcome" to it.
18:42In the end, the stock exchange was considered a cavalryman.
18:44And it can transmit diseases like other reptiles.
18:46Pets, Public Health Agency of Canada
18:48It is investigating a salmonella outbreak.
18:50They found that many individuals who were infected with the disease
18:53They were in direct contact
18:54Or they live in the same house where he grew up.
18:56Bors Alif, besides of course the germs that might be present
18:59In its por, it's like E. coli
19:00And the tree, so here, my dear, is the one that smells the foundation, maybe
19:03It actually protects us from the porcelain
19:04Even if the feelings are not proportionate
19:06While it has a real impact, it might prevent us.
19:09Or we were prevented from investigating the nature
19:11This animal and its relationship to us
19:12I researched it, Rahman, we won't leave the stock market alone.
19:14The important thing is that he doesn't enter the apartment; I don't want any contact with him.
19:16I don't want salmonella and coli
19:18And the tree wants you, my dear, to calm down and leave the scum alone.
19:20I'm saying "balcony" and I'm stopping the search for the stock.
19:22And you search within yourself, my dear, your own self said
19:24If you searched within yourself for a superhero
19:26What would you choose to be?
19:27Honestly, Muhammad doesn't know the truth, but I mean, Batman
19:30Spider-Man
19:31I mean, something in this range is more believable.
19:33And the cutters and the spider, you, my love, if you saw something
19:36Who are these people on the balcony, Ahwaj?
19:37You'll be disgusted and run after him with slippers
19:39But we see that humans chose animals as superheroes.
19:42Because of their superhuman abilities
19:43The spider makes complex webs
19:45The bat has a radar, it came at the port
19:47What does the stock exchange have, my dear? It has everything I explained to you.
19:49Abilities that we humans don't possess, and that we wish we had.
19:51Sufficient capabilities to create a comic called Gekko Man
19:54Mohammed Bahlash is a fantasy
19:55This means a person can truly acquire the abilities of the Bors
19:57That's exactly it, my dear, but with knowledge.
19:59When scientists saw something like the speed of the porcelain
20:01On the water's surface, an idea like this is a blessing.
20:03For engineers, this is how we can develop
20:05Robots that walk on water in the areas
20:07The ones that were flooded by the rivers, for example
20:09Search or rescue efforts
20:11Also, he understood a supernatural ability like
20:13How can this bourse stick to surfaces?
20:16At the nanometer level
20:17Inspire engineers to create materials
20:19Adhesive, natural, and bonding materials
20:22Strongly without glue and while
20:23If you remove regular tape from its place and reuse it
20:26Its effect will weaken until it fades away.
20:28These materials, my dear, will be like
20:30The ends of the porcelain do not weaken its adhesion.
20:31No matter how much it's removed and returned, for example
20:33When humans suffer a spinal cord injury
20:36The tissues produce a warning that prevents
20:37Spinal cord tissue regeneration
20:39If we understood, for example, how the stock market works
20:41He's renewing his deal.
20:43According to Matthew in Carus, this will help us.
20:45Biological Deflection World at the University of Guelph in Canada
20:48Study of cell division
20:49What happens in the liver and what depends on stem cells
20:52We can use it to solve problems in our departments.
20:54tissue regeneration costume
20:55Jazi, my dear, you must remember that we have to study the labyrinth for superpowers.
20:58What we don't have, but my dear friend
20:59We study them because they are similar to us.
21:00Who is this guy who looks like Abu Abd, the boss? You're acting like you're something special.
21:02Humans and those who share organs and the eye
21:04This fovea is part of the retina
21:06It helps us to see a clearer vision
21:08We focus on the things that are right in front of us.
21:10In places like the National Eye Institute
21:12They use Gene Editing Tool
21:14Gene editing methods mean tools
21:16Alterations in the genes of the labras such that
21:18We're going to let these women suffer.
21:20Diseases that occur in the human eye
21:22They can study through eyes
21:24The Libras that resemble us in the Fovia di
21:32Lizards and lizards, we always protect the rest of us
21:34So they don't get in, but if we think
21:36We will find that lizards suffer from the opposite.
21:38Actually, they were unable to protect the environment.
21:40From man, even though man
21:42The biggest cause of damage in nature
21:44The year ninety-seven will be flooded
21:46Artificial islands in Brazil
21:48To provide hydroelectric power
21:50This will lead to the extinction of five lizard species.
21:52The area was inhabited by lizards the size of
21:54He allowed her to feed on large insects.
21:57The journey, my dear, is to highlight
21:58In the same area, her body will develop during
22:00Duration: Not exceeding 15 years
22:02So that her head grows bigger and she can eat.
22:04On the large insects that the lizards left behind
22:06roaming within the ecosystem
22:07The ability of the libras to adapt is astonishing and intelligent.
22:10Because the head of the hairy woman is the only one that has grown big.
22:12So that you can feed me the new horse
22:13Among them, if the whole body were to grow larger, its mass would also increase.
22:16And its movement will slow down
22:18You'll need more food and it will be yours.
22:20I didn't do anything, so I'm going to be left alone in the end, my dear.
22:22We are dealing with beings whose emotions may affect you.
22:23Her side was straw-covered
22:25While she is, in one aspect, a superhero
22:27Scientists hope to replicate its capabilities and those of similar scientists.
22:29We can test them for our diseases
22:31And sometimes they use all their intelligence to adapt
22:34With environmental and climatic changes
22:36Man-made, the man who is left to his own devices
22:38The rest of them are fine, perhaps, my dear
22:40But if you see Bors, you'll be tamed gently.
22:41And you remain aware that you are in the presence of a creature
22:43It might benefit you far more than you realize.
22:45That's it, my dear, finally, finally!
22:47Let's look at the previous case, now let's look at the next one.
22:49If you're on YouTube, please subscribe to the channel.
22:55We're between 2 AM and 8 PM
22:57Because I need it
23:27Translated by Nancy Qanqar