ေနရာ

လူေတြဟာ ဘ၀အတြက္ ျပည့္စံုမႈေတြ ေတာင့္တၾကတယ္၊ ေတာင္းဆုိၾကတယ္။ ကိုယ္လိုခ်င္တာေတြရၿပီး ျပည့္စံုမႈေတြရွိသြားရင္ ေပ်ာ္ရႊင္သြားၾကလိမ့္မယ္လုိ႔ထင္တယ္။ ဒါေပမဲ့ လူအမ်ားစုဟာ ကိုယ္ ဘာျဖစ္ခ်င္တာလဲ၊ ဘာကို လိုခ်င္တာလဲဆိုတဲ့ ကိုယ့္ရဲ႕ ခံစားမႈအစစ္အမွန္ကို နားလည္ေအာင္ မႀကိဳးစားၾကဘဲ လမ္းလြဲလုိက္ရင္း သူတို႔ရဲ႕ တန္ဖိုးရွိတဲ့အခ်ိန္ေတြကို အလဟႆ ကုန္ဆံုးသြားခဲ့တယ္။ နားလည္ပါ ၊ ႀကိဳးစားတဲ့သူတိုင္းအတြက္ ေနရာတစ္ေနရာ အျမဲရွိေနမွာပါ။ ေနတတ္ေအာင္ ေနဖို႔ လိုသလို ေနခ်င္တဲ့ေနရာ ျဖစ္ဖို႔လည္း လိုတယ္ေလ။

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Squids




Squid are marine cephalopods of the order Teuthida, which comprises around 300 species. Like all other cephalopods, squid have a distinct head, bilateral symmetry, a mantle, and arms. Squid, like cuttlefish, have eight arms arranged in pairs and two, usually longer, tentacles. Squid are strong swimmers and certain species can 'fly' for short distances out of the water.


 Jellyfish




Jellyfish (also known as jellies or sea jellies or Medusozoa) are free-swimming members of the phylum Cnidaria. Jellyfish have several different morphologies that represent several different cnidarian classes including the Scyphozoa (over 200 species), Staurozoa (about 50 species), Cubozoa (about 20 species), and Hydrozoa (about 1000–1500 species that make jellyfish and many more that do not). Medusa is another word for jellyfish, and refers to any free-swimming jellyfish stages in the phylum Cnidaria.
Jellyfish are found in every ocean, from the surface to the deep sea. Some hydrozoan jellyfish, or hydromedusae, are also found in fresh water; freshwater species are less than an inch (25 mm) in diameter, are colorless and do not sting. Many of the best-known jellyfish, such as Aurelia, are scyphomedusae. These are the large, often colorful, jellyfish that are common in coastal zones worldwide.
In its broadest sense, the term jellyfish also generally refers to members of the phylum Ctenophora. Although not closely related to cnidarian jellyfish, ctenophores are also free-swimming planktonic carnivores, are generally transparent or translucent, and exist in shallow to deep portions of all the world's oceans.
Alternative names for groups of jellyfish are scyphomedusae, stauromedusae, cubomedusae, and hydromedusae. These may relate to an entire order or class.

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