Answer:
hi there
Explanation:
Bhabar is a region south of the Lower Himalayas and the Shiwalik Hills.
It is the alluvial apron of sediments washed down from the Siwaliks along the northern edge of the Indo-Gangetic Plain.
The name Bhabhar refers to a local tall-growing grass, Eulaliopsis binata, used for the manufacture of paper and rope.
Bhabhar is the gently-sloping coarse alluvial zone below the Siwalik Hills (outermost foothills of Himalaya) where streams disappear into permeable sediments. The underground water level is deep in this region, then rises to the surface in the Terai below where coarse alluvium gives way to less permeable silt and clay. The Ganges River lies to the west and Sharda to the east.
Being at the junction of Himalayas and the Indo-Gangetic Plain, Bhabhar contains almost all the important trade and commerce hubs of Uttarakhand state. Due to the top-soil replenishment every monsoon,it is also a fertile area with large yields per unit area.
In 1901 Bhabhar was also one of four division of Nainital district. It included 4 towns and 511 villages with a combined population of 93,445 (1901), spread over 1,279 square miles (3,310 km2). It corresponded to the current subdivision of Haldwani.
Depression, miss use of alcohol or drugs, or maybe peer pressure
Answer:
working to solve a problem
Explanation:
While George takes the bus home, he is thinking about how to resolve a difficult issue at work. This is an example of the mind working to solve a problem.
Answer: the answer is Regulatory pillar
Explanation:
Quizle Romila ensures that she pays taxes out of fear that she might be caught and sent to prison for evading taxes. The given example shows the influence of regulatory pillar on people’s behavior.
The regulatory pillar is the forceful power of the government exercised through laws,regulations and rules.
Romila was influenced by the mentality of been prosecuted if she avoids paying of taxes
Answer:
The correct answer is ''ability to take the role''.
Explanation:
George Herbert Mead was a social psychologist who explained that the human societies in which we are interested are forest societies. The human individual is a self, only insofar as he takes the attitude of the other towards himself. Insofar as that attitude is that of a certain number of others, insofar as he can adopt the organized attitudes of a certain number of others who are cooperating in a common activity, he takes the group's attitudes towards himself, by taking that or those attitudes, is defining the object of the group that which defines and controls response. For Mead this is possible insofar as people are capable of internalizing the behavior of others, we are capable of acting knowing the behavior that others will do. By internalizing the "generalized other", that is, the attitudes of others, the individual behaves in a certain way.