The correct answer is option C, The narrator's platoon was surrounded by the enemy, similar to the way the narrator feels when he is surrounded by his family
Reason -
In the story by Tim O’Brien’s, It is clear that the narrator is puzzled at two instances and at these two instances the word "Ambush" relate to its title The two instances are given below:
a) The first instance is when the narrator’s daughter is asking him question about his war time memories. The narrator feels guilty when he lied to his daughter in order to be a hero in front of her but somewhere he was aware that he was lying.
b) The second instance is when the narrator threw a bomb and killed a soldier of another nation. He is guilty about killing anyone during wartime.
Answer:
Plants
Explanation:
They are multicellular organisms. In plants there are two types of reproduction :- sexual and asexual. Sexual reproduction happens when androecium and gynoecium both fuses and in asexual reproduction when only androecium or gynoecium is present in a plant. Androecium us a male part off flower and gynoecium is the female part of flower. Plants can't move that we all know and they are autotrophs coz they can make their own food in presence of sunlight, water, air and chlorophyll.....
I hope u will understand it :-) :-)
There are far to many variables to make a true accurate answer, this is coming from a medical responder BUT lots of texts say about 120 min....but that's very much debatable
Answer:
During the oxidation of glucose in the liver the malate aspartate shuttle system is used, therefore, two additional ATPs get generated at the step constituting glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.
On the other hand, in the brain, a cell uses the glycerol phosphate shuttle system, which generates two less number of ATPs. However, the remaining of the energetics for the number of ATP in both cases are similar.
Thus, the difference is based upon the kind of shuttle system used that leads to the production of 32 ATPs in liver cells and 30 ATPs in the brain cells.