Answer:
The sound of the bad rustling is called conditioned stimulus.
Maddie's ability to tell the difference is called discrimination.
Explanation:
In classical conditioning, a conditioned stimulus can be defined as a neutral stimulus that has become associated with an unconditioned stimulus and, eventually, begins to trigger a conditioned response. In Maddie's case, she learned to associate the sound of the bag to being given food. For that reason, the sound of the bag has become the conditioned stimulus that triggers her response of running to the kitchen.
Discrimination, in classical conditioning, is the ability to tell the difference between a stimulus and other stimuli that are similar to it. The sounds of Maddie's dog food bag and the chips bag may be similar, but Maggie has learned to differentiate them. She is showing discrimination, which is why she does not run to the kitchen when she hears the sound of the chips bag.
Not really any of these because an alliteration is a phrases that most words start with the same letter. if it has to be one it would be c.
A is possibly your best option, even as themes can be impacted by setting in many other ways......theme is the main and idea of the piece of literature and a theme can also symbolize a primary conflict.
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I believe the correct answer is: False.
When Hamlet stabs Polonius in William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”,
Act III, scene 2, Hamlet does not recognize Polonius’s voice prior to the
killing. After he stabs him, he asks If he has stabbed the king:
GERTRUDE:
Oh my God, what have you done?
HAMLET:
I don’t know. Is it the king?