A culture is made up of many complex parts of the country its traditions, beliefs, art, music, clothing, food, holidays, languages, family and marriage rules or laws, games, folktales, and mythology. Culture is “the way of life” of a country or society, and these ways of living together including value systems, traditions, and beliefs are passed down from generation to generation. While all cultures have universal traits, different cultures have developed their own specific ways of expressing them. For example, people around the world are similar in that we communicate with each other, live by eating food and drinking water, and dream when we sleep. Yet we speak different languages, eat different foods, and dream different dreams. Anthropologists (people that research different cultures and how they develop) say that culture is made up of at least three parts: what people think, what they do, and the products they produce. In complex cultures such as the United States, culture is what knits us together as human beings living in one country, but also separates us into our different ethnic communities.
- Why do flies like cow poop?
- How can cows make so much milk?
- Can farm animals be cloned?
- Why does a rooster crow when the Sun comes up?
- What is a fish farm?
- Does organic farming contribute to less pollution?
- What is organic farming?
- Why are crops sprayed with pesticides?
- What is a silo?
- What causes hiccups?
- Why do people sometimes burp?
- What do potato chips have to do with the heart?
- Why do some people throw up when they eat spicy food?
- Why are barns usually painted red?
- Where are people suffering from disease and poverty?
- Are soap, booger, and earwax really jellybean flavors?
- Does the red color in fruit juice really come from a beetle?
- What does the esophagus do?
- Why should I drink lots of water?
- How much food does the average person eat in a year?


