I die of cancer when we speak?

I will submit my disclaimer for you to see a doctor because I am not a doctor or cancer researcher. However, I can give you some statistics and information that will make you feel better.

Have you been smoking or chewing tobacco for years? Do you have a history of oral cancer in the family? Have you had oral sex that could put you at risk for the STD Human Papilloma Virus? Do you drink alcohol in large quantities daily? Do you have any pain swallowing or swollen lymph nodes? Any bleeding or white lesions? Any pain in your ears, head, jaw? Did the teeth fall out for no reason? Are you over 40 years old If you answered yes to 1 or more, I would check it out. But after the braces look, I’ll let my neck out there and say no. The hard line in your lip that you tore out was dried skin, which turns faster than other skin cells due to the high moisture content in your mouth. Winter also sells a lot of lip balm for this reason. If you tear it off, the skin underneath may be exposed and swollen due to the trauma. The unevenness of the tear would have created the separate areas of the swell.

Christina Cherry
Children learn to speak early - but grammar takes time, nzz

Children learn to speak early – but grammar takes time

Only at the age of 10 do children understand complex sentences almost as well as adults. Researchers say that brain maturation sets the pace for language development.

In the children’s language laboratory, Michael Skeide practices with the children on a dummy fMRI so that they are prepared for the real measurements. (Image: MPI Leipzig)

Three-year-olds understand simple sentences with ease. However, many years will pass before children master the subtleties of language as well as adults. Because the brain matures in stages. While the first structures of language processing are fully functional before birth and babies are unconsciously able to distinguish simple syllables like ma and pa, others only develop in the age of three to ten, such as Michael Skeide and Angela Friederici in an opinion article in Write "Nature Reviews Neuroscience".

Christina Cherry