ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY I (BIO 2311) SYLLABUS - New York City




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ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY I (BIO 2311) SYLLABUS - New York City

This is the first part of a two semester course It covers the anatomy and physiology of the cell, tissues, integumentary, skeletal, muscular and nervous systems Prerequisites: BIO 1101, College-level general biology course with lab or a score of 85 or above on the New York State Regent’s exam and CUNY proficiency in reading and writing

14 Stress, Stress Rules, and Syllable Weight

which the feature [stress] is attached to syllables rather than to vowels In this view, [pa tai ma] does indeed have only three possibilities for stress, shown below We will see that attaching stress to syllables also offers advantages in formulating stress assignment rules 14 2 3 Fixed vs free stress

Chapter 1 Anatomy and Physiology: The Big Picture COPYRIGHTED

10 Part I: Locating Physiology on the Web of Knowledge How anatomy and physiology fit into science Biologists take for granted that human anatomy and physiology evolved from the anatomy and physiology of ancient forms These scientists base their work on the assumption that every structure and process, no matter how

Physiology

Apply A Go online to listen to the words In the right column, write how many syllables you hear in each word 1 description 3 2 stomach 2 3 information 4 4 heart 1 5 physiology 5 6 situation 4 Page 10 Apply B Go online to listen to the words Circle the syllable that is stressed 1 e • mo• tion 2 re • sponse

135681_7BIO2311.pdf
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