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Your Questions About Bar Brothers Wikipedia

George asks…

What body parts do pull ups work out?

What about diamond push ups?

admin answers:

There are SO many diff. Types you can do my fav. Would have to be the weighted pull-up this is fun -weight is added using a dipping belt, or grasping a dumbbell with the feet. And pulling up on the bar, doing sets of these a few times a day and you’ll be very fit. Mostly with your arms and shoulders! My brother normally uses the behind-the-neck pull-up in this one your chin is dropped and the goal of the pull-up is to touch the bar with the back of the neck. Which really works out fore arms and shoulders, most pull ups do lol, theres also a very hard one that he can do but i can’t it’s called the one arm pull-up and with a one arm pull-up you grasp the bar with only one hand while pulling up. Because of it’s difficulty, it requires considerable fitness. But really if you want to learn any more about fitness go to a gym and ask around or look it up online Wikipedia helps with anything and everything ;p j/k but looking it up will help! So they work out many parts in your arms and shoulders but be safe my brother has hurt himself badly before working out. Well ttyl BYE!

Sandy asks…

I have a paper to do that is titled am i my brothers keeper.?

I need to find sources from the internet that relate to this topic. I have also had to read a Modest proposal for this paper to.

admin answers:

Bible
(Gen 4:9 ) And the LORD said unto Cain, Where [is] Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: [Am] I my brother’s keeper?

Dictionary
keep‧er  /ˈkipÉ™r/ Pronunciation Key – Show Spelled Pronunciation[kee-per] Pronunciation Key – Show IPA Pronunciation

–noun 1. A person who guards or watches, as at a prison or gate.
2. A person who assumes responsibility for another’s behavior: He refused to be his brother’s keeper.
3. A person who owns or operates a business (usually used in combination): a hotelkeeper.
4. A person who is responsible for the maintenance of something (often used in combination): a zookeeper; a groundskeeper.
5. A person charged with responsibility for the preservation and conservation of something valuable, as a curator or game warden.
6. A person who conforms to or abides by a requirement: a keeper of his word.
7. A fish that is of sufficient size to be caught and retained without violating the law.
8. Football. A play in which the quarterback retains the ball and runs with it, usually after faking a hand-off or pass.
9. Something that serves to hold in place, retain, etc., as on a door lock.
10. Something that lasts well, as a fruit.
11. Guard ring.
12. An iron or steel bar placed across the poles of a permanent horseshoe magnet for preserving the strength of the magnet during storage.
[Origin: 1250–1300; ME keper. See keep, -er1]
—Related forms
keep‧er‧less, adjective
keep‧er‧ship, noun
—Synonyms 1. Warden, jailer. 2. Custodian, guardian.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brother’s keeper (and variants thereof) is a Biblical phrase from William Tyndale’s translation of the story of Cain and Abel. In Genesis 4:9, Cain questions his responsibility to look after his brother Abel: “Am I my brother’s keeper?”

Life experience
Yes we are our brother’s keepers. For if one is extinguished then all can follow.

Mandy asks…

How did Sarah Silverman’s brother die?

I just read an interview with Sarah Silverman in a UK paper. It mentioned that her brother Jeffrey died as a child ‘under their grandmother’s care’. Does anyone know what happened? The incident isn’t even mentioned in Sarah’s Wikipedia entry.Thanks!
No luck on Google.

admin answers:

He strangled himself (accidentally).

He was napping and got his head stuck between the bars of the crib.

Horrific story…

Lisa asks…

did i understand the hundred years war right?

so the king of France dies and the next in line is a British king, Edward III and the french nobles are not happy about that so they place Philip on the throne which causes a lot of tension. Edward has to deal with the Scottish uprising and the french use the opportunity to get back the french lands that the British controlled which break the treaty of Aquitaine and causes the war.
did i understand it right or did i get something’s wrong?

admin answers:

Causes of the Hundred Years War
Edward III, king of England, asserted that he in fact had a superior claimed to the throne because his mother was Philip the Fair’s daughter. This, then, was one of the primary causes of the Hundred Years’ War. Another cause of the Hundred Years’ War was clearly economic conflict. The French monarchy tried to squeeze new taxes from towns in northern Europe which had grown wealthy as trade and cloth-making centers. Dependent as they were on English wool, these towns through their support behind English and Edward III. Http://www.middle-ages.org.uk/hundred-years-war.htm —————- Hundred Years War family tree http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hundred_Years_War_family_tree.png ———– The specific events leading up to the war took place in France, where the unbroken line of the Direct Capetian firstborn sons had succeeded each other for centuries. It was the longest continuous dynasty in medieval Europe. In 1314, the Direct Capetian, King Philip IV, died, leaving three male heirs: Louis X, Philip V, and Charles IV. A fourth child of Phillip IV, Isabella, was married to Edward II of England, and in 1312 had produced a son, Edward of Windsor, who was a potential heir to the thrones of both England (through his father) and France (through his grandfather).

Philip IV’s eldest son and heir, Louis X, died in 1316, leaving only his posthumous son John I, who was born and died that same year, and a daughter Joan, whose paternity was suspect.

Upon the deaths of Louis X and John I, Philip IV’s second-eldest son, Philip V, sought the throne for himself, using rumours that his niece Joan was a result of her mother’s adultery (and thus barred from the succession). A by-product of this was the invocation in the 1380s of Salic law to assert that women could not inherit the French throne. When Philip V himself died in 1322, his daughters, too, were put aside in favour of an uncle: Charles IV, the third son of Philip IV.

In 1324, Charles IV of France and his brother-in-law, Edward II of England fought the short War of Saint-Sardos in Gascony. The major event of the war was the brief siege of the English fortress of La Réole, on the Garonne. The English forces, led by Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, were forced to surrender after a month of bombardment from the French cannons, after promised reinforcements never arrived. The war was a complete failure for England, and only Bordeaux and a narrow coastal strip of the once great Duchy of Aquitaine remained in English hands.

The recovery of these lost lands became a major focus of English diplomacy. The war also galvanised opposition to Edward II among the English nobility and led to his being deposed from the throne in 1327, in favour of his young son, Edward of Windsor, who thus became Edward III. Charles IV died in 1328, leaving only a daughter, and an unborn infant who would prove to be a girl. The senior line of the Capetian dynasty thus ended, creating a crisis over the French succession.
Meanwhile in England, the young Edward of Windsor had become King Edward III of England in 1327. Being also the nephew of Charles IV of France, Edward was Charles’ closest living male relative, and the only surviving male descendent of Philip IV. By the English interpretation of feudal law, this made Edward III the legitimate heir to the throne of France.
Family tree relating the French and English royal houses at the beginning of the warThe French nobility, however, balked at the prospect of a foreign king, particularly one who was also king of England. They asserted, based on their interpretation of the ancient Salic Law, that the royal inheritance could not pass to a woman or through her to her offspring. Therefore, the most senior male of the Capetian dynasty after Charles IV, Philip of Valois, grandson of Philip III of France, was the legitimate heir in the eyes of the French. He had taken regency after Charles IV’s death and was allowed to take the throne after Charles’ widow gave birth to a daughter. Philip of Valois was crowned as Philip VI, the first of the House of Valois, a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty.
Joan II of Navarre, the daughter of Louis X, also had a good legal claim to the French throne, but lacked the power to back it up. The Kingdom of Navarre had no precedent against female rulers (the House of Capet having inherited it through Joan’s grandmother, Joan I of Navarre), and so by treaty she and her husband, Philip of Evreux, were permitted to inherit that Kingdom; however, the same treaty forced Joan and her husband to accept the accession of Philip VI in France, and to surrender her hereditary French domains of Champagne and Brie to the French crown in exchange for inferior estates. Joan and Philip of Evreux then produced a son, Charles II of Navarre. Born in 1332, Charles replaced Edward III as Philip IV’s male heir in primogeniture, and in proximity to Louis X; although Edward remained the male

Ruth asks…

Can Someone Please Help Me With Montana 1948?

For Montana 1948 who are the major characters and a brief description about them. Also can i have a plot summary of the whole book since i need to make a brochure for my American lit class for the book Montana 1948 and i need to include a plot summary and a list of major characters with brief descriptions and why my audience should read this book?

admin answers:

Hmm okay~ wikipedia says:

MONTANA, 1948
David Hayden – 12-year-old narrator- 52 before flashback.
– Wanted to grow up in the country
– Very shy and serious
– Felt he lacked knowledge about living comfortably and unself-consciously.
– Often blamed the town for his shyness and seriousness, wanted to escape as often as he could
– an inward child, felt a contentment [a satisfaction] outside human society that he couldnt feel within it
-life changed because of what happened to his babysitter.
– was 12 when he “grew up”
Marie Little Soldier- house-keeper, babysitter of David
– Came to Mercer County, Montana because of her mother’s marriage to Frenchy – was 20 when she came to Montana
– A Hunkpapa Sioux Native originally from the Fort Berthold Reservation in ND
– loved to laugh and talk, great tease, close to 6 feet tall, dresses were either handed down or handed up, wide face and high cheekbones, long straight black hair, David had a crush on her
Marie Little Soldier’s Mother- Married a Canadian named Frenchy who owned a bar in Bentrock
Frenchy- Owner of Frenchy’s, a dirty run-down cowboy hangout at the edge of town. Was rumored to have an Indian woman locked in his storeroom whom anyone could have sex with for only two dollars
Mrs. Gail Hayden- Lutheran, from Eastern ND in the Red River Valley
– Wanted Wes to be himself and not a Hayden.
– Wanted to move back to North Dakota Concerned about David’s values
– Wished for a larger community to raise David in, one not so easily escapable
– Worked as a sceretary in the Register Deeds Office at the courthouse across the street from the Hayden home.
– Devoted Lutheran
– Dies of a heart attack
Mr. Wes Hayden- sheriff, when he was 16 a horse kicked him and left him with a permanent limp
– Serving second term as sherriff
– Born in 1910 in Mercer County
– Moved to Bentrock with his parents and brother in the early twenties
– Grew up on a cattle ranch outside Bentrock
– Father was a sherriff as well
– Not religious
– Dies of Cancer
Mr. Julian Hayden (Grandfather)-
– brought his famiy to town to live in a small apartment when he was serving as sheriff
– “He wanted, he needed, power … He was a dominating man who drew sustenance and strength from controlling others.” (watson 20)
old deputy sherrif of mercer county, rich ranch owner, powerful, white long hair with bushy sideburns, lack of manners, inappropriate at times, uses foul language. Is very rude to his one son, David’s father. David says many times that it must have been hard for his father growing up with sucha terrible person.
– thinks family is more important than following justice
Frank Hayden – David’s uncle, war hero, doctor, witty, charismatic, charming, rapist, two- faced. He had been a star athlete in high school and college, During WWII on a Pacific Island, he carried three soldiers to safety. He is a killer and committed suicide
~~~~~PLOT~~~~~~~~

The story follows the Hayden family and their struggle with loyalty, justice, identity and family. Family members include: the narrator – 12 year old David, his father and town sheriff Wes, David’s mother Gail, his uncle Frank, grandfather and predecessor as sheriff Len and the housekeeper Marie Little Soldier. When David’s family’s Native American housekeeper Marie falls ill, Frank Hayden, the local doctor is called. When Marie refuses medical treatment, David’s parents, Gail and Wes, discover that Frank has been preying on the local native American women, raping and molesting them. Wes confronts Frank at a dinner at their father’s house. Wes and Gail reach a compromise. When Marie is found dead, Frank convinces the family it is a result of the illness, however David proves (with many reservations) that Frank had murdered her, in order to silence her. Marie’s parents choose to have her buried in North Dakota. The family faces much turmoil as Wes attempts to remain loyal to justice and family, but his inability to make a choice leaves him to imprison his brother in the basement. At this stage, David’s grandfather intervenes, showing his clear favour for Frank over Wes. He sends men to break Frank out of his jail, however Gail fights to stop them, leaving her deeply traumatized by the experience. That night, the family heard the sound of breaking glass in the basement, but pass it off as caused by the anger of Frank. Next morning, Wes finds Frank dead in the basement, having committed suicide. The family choose to cover up the suicide, in an attempt to save Frank’s reputation, however David’s grandfather does not forgive Wes, and so Wes, David and Gail are ostracized from the Montana township. They move to Fargo, North Dakota where Wes takes a job as a lawyer.

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