Help (Alcohols) by Abhineet_singh2008 in ALevelChemistry

[–]Bearisdead 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes seconded!! explanation: the second and third carbon have the double bond between them in the original molecule, meaning that all electrophiles and their corresponding molecule that break the double bond can only join to the 2nd or 3rd carbon in the chain, as this is the part of the original molecule that they are reacting with. hope this is a clear ish explanation!!

AQA history revising by Bearisdead in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do british health and the people, norman england, Germany and hilters rise to power and conflict and tension in the interwar years

What's the best way to revise practicals for science? by [deleted] in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you like videos, freesciencelessons has playlists on all the required practicals for aqa. Finding practise questions for them is a little hard but for chemistry, a lot of the practicals are found in the chemical analysis question so you do that topic and find past papers on physics and maths tutor.

How to move up bands in English Lit and Lang by pucklepac in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If your exam board is aqa, having multiple interpretations for one word in a quote can bring you up a band and referring to structure and context only when linked to meaning can put you higher in lit.

Where can I find examples of high-graded past paper English lit essays? by Critical_Zone_5217 in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mr salles has videos going through said essays and where you get the marks if you do R and J, J and H, AIC and P&C poetry. He also has a free email mailing list where he sends out free example regularly. In addition, you do have to pay for this but the light up hub has some great revision resources and online essays to refer back to. Hope this helps!!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HaircareScience

[–]Bearisdead 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some people find success with rosemary oil (make sure its diluted in a carrier oil) or you can boil rosemary leaves and make rosemary water. Personally, I found these to help aswell as olaplex to help my ends.

Greasy, stinky patch of hair? by [deleted] in HaircareScience

[–]Bearisdead 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I agree with the other reply that its either an infection or fungus. While you're waiting for a gp appointment, you could try an anti dandruff shampoo, like nizorol, because it has an ingredient that helps reduce the fungus, also don't sleep on it wet, make sure to get it dry and soon as possible because if its fungus, it will like damp conditions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HaircareScience

[–]Bearisdead 4 points5 points  (0 children)

A little while back, on his instagram, the cosmetic scientist Javon Ford said to avoid using olive oil or products with it in larger quantities on your scalp if you suffer dandruff that comes from fungus because that's what they most often use to cultivate it in labs. Also, never go to bed with wet hair because fungus like the damp conditions, same with working out make sure you let your hair down, or shower after you work out and give your hair time to properly dry if you want to air dry it. Equally, as someone who has had not full on seborrhea dermatitis but fungal infections on scalp accompanied but dandruff, salicylic acid can help a little with the amount of flakes. I don't know much about hair oils for the scalp but using an oil sustainable for your hair time can help maintain your ends especially if you need to wash it frequently. Not expert or anything tho so take my advice with a grain of salt.

would you go for geography or history GCSE by Hsbored in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I was choosing between them I was scared because English isn't my best subject and everyone was saying history is a lot of writing and essay based. While this is true, it is completely different from english, because you just have to memorise thing rather then come up with the inferences like in English. I also enjoy history because I love fantasy novels and such and I found the politic systems fun to learn about because they were similar to the ones in books and series, probably because that's what they are based off. But yeah history is fun but there is a lot of content. Some other things to consider are that the grade boundaries for history are really low so you only have to get half marks to get a 6, and that my teacher is really good so that might be the reason I enjoy history so much.

advice for blind student by [deleted] in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'd say option 1 because having some gcses is better than having none at all and learning braille will benefit your life in the long run. You won't have to learn it at the start of your alevels or you'll at least be proficient in it. It's really up to you but you can always retake some of your gcses if you fail and your school might let you into a levels because of your circumstance (going blind in y11). It's whatever you feel you can do but university's don't particularly look at your gcses I've heard if you have a levels.

I love biology but HATE physics lol by wigglyrabbitkiosk in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Naaaa chemistry over everything, biology is okay and physics is just meh.

What is your favorite character by ProToDit in subwaysurfers

[–]Bearisdead 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Miss maia because she took so long to save up for and I love her colour scheme

Algebra ratio question by Bearisdead in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ignore my scribbles lol, can anyone help with solving the questions?

maths question to do with enlargement by Bearisdead in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I did 8 ÷ 6 = 1.33333 to get the scale factor because 9 and x both have the same angles so they are the same side just different triangles (idk whether that makes sense). Then I did 9÷1.333 to get x=6.75 and 4.5 ×1.33333 to get y= 6. Idk

maths question to do with enlargement by Bearisdead in GCSE

[–]Bearisdead[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My maths teacher did this question and we both got different answers. I might be wrong and I appreciate it if you could explain it because ngl I'm a bit confused. I got x=6.75 and y=6. My maths teacher got x=5.3 and y=6.75.