Answer:
All of the following are considered plagiarism:
turning in someone else's work as your own. copying words or ideas from someone else without giving credit. failing to put a quotation in quotation marks. giving incorrect information about the source of a quotation.
Explanation:
ITS all in the brain
The answer that best completes the above sentence is "Positive self talk"
This is firstly because, internal motivation comes from with oneself, and not form another (motivation from another person is external motivation). Having said that, in motivating oneself, it is important for a person to be able to talk positively to themselves; this increases self-esteem which in turn leads to increased motivation.
Answer:
She had been so worried that her boy-friend, Alex, would have gone through it by now seeing as she forgot it here in his room a couple of days back.
It would have been monumentally embarrassing if he had gone through the journal because it contained details of her life for the past three years including her most embarrassing moments as well as int-imate details with her two previous boy-friends.
Angela breathed a sigh of relief and hid the journal in her bag before she stepped out of the room and said her goodbyes to Alex's mom. She did not know it but she was smiling all the way home.
Answer:
Just try to be grat at it
Explanation:
Answer:
"She very soon came to an open field, with a wood on the other side of it: it looked much darker than the last wood, and Alice felt a little timid about going into it."
Explanation:
In the beginning, Alice is afraid to go into the woods alone. "She very soon came to an open field, with a wood on the other side of it: it looked much darker than the last wood, and Alice felt a little timid about going into it."
There are several instances in Through the Looking-Glass where the word "wood" or "forest" is used as a symbol for the tree.
This is a well-known symbol associated with the unconscious according to Jungian psychoanalysts. The forest was revered by the Celts as a sacred site. The "trials" a hero must go through in literature also include this technique as one of the tools they can use to help them. The wood serves as a metaphor for Alice's fears as well as a roadblock in her journey.