Emily_Ge

Emily_Ge t1_ixlpuf6 wrote

And at some point, there is no way to physically freeze something fast enough. Because the rate at which the heat is ‚sucked‘ out of a body, is dependent on the distance it has to travel.

Even if you replace a humans blood with glycerine and do everything you can to inhibit crystal formation: there‘d still be too large distances, and you‘d cause damage.

Not to mention the brain being extremely sensitive to cell loss.

And even when freezing embryos like in your example: some won‘t be able to be revived.

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Emily_Ge t1_ivydfll wrote

More specifically: while one X chromosome usually gets deactivated in XX women, this inactivation ist complete. An XX Woman has one whole X chromosome and about 15% of the remaining X chromosome active for protein production.

X0 individuals will lack this genetic information and thus some proteins are produced in less quantity than usual. Which leads to incomplete sex development.

Thus since X0 individuals don‘t have the regular 15% extra X, they cannot properly develop gonads in the first place. Despite the later pathways being set to ‚female‘

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Emily_Ge t1_itqneku wrote

It‘s like pinching a hose. Despite the pressure at the pinch point being higher, distal to the pinchinung the pressure is massively reduced, and only a tricky come out the end of the hose.

Just like you said at the end.

The part you missed is that the injury site itself, keeps the same diameter. To any reduction in diameter proximal to the injury reduces the blood flow. Which reduces the pressure at the site of injury.

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Emily_Ge t1_itjpl9h wrote

Yea they had both a long time ago, German kept Du/Sie.

Same with Dutch, but Dutch is much further on the path to unification of the two, German not so much.

Also both German and Dutch are moving towards only using the informal jij/je/Du instead of English which went with the formal as the standard form.

In German the two are still used pretty much, and you‘ll have twenty year olds saying Sie to other twenty year olds in formal settings. While in Dutch it‘s virtually disused under forty.

Also in German formal Settings there‘s still some rules about the higher ranking person offering the informal first before those get used like again in a business context, whereas in Dutch the change is basically fluid, going to informal from formal ‚on your own‘.

Though it very much depends on individual culture, like the German internet does not use Sie. Unless you got an utterly clueless lunatic on eBay Kleinanzeigen thinking they are being disrespected.

Same way that I’ve never had any complaints for just using the informal at work for anyone under 40 either.

And meeting someone outside of business/bureaucracy going informal is pretty much standard, unless it‘s a 90 year old neighbor still running on the old ruleset.

Also I find the informal variant extremely disrespectful (and am not alone with that interpretation) because it creates a massive ‚distance‘ and is usually used in dehumanizing context anyway.

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