A is the correct answer, and he is showing how to do cook a dish.
Answer:
dissociative amnesia
Explanation:
Dissociative amnesia may be defined as a medical condition where n individual is not able to remember some of the important information about his or her life. The brain goes blank abut what has happened to them and could not recall any information.
When a person cannot remember any information form a certain period of time, it is then called as localized dissociative amnesia.
In the context, Alison went missing for three weeks and when found she could not remember where she was for the last three weeks and what happened to her. She is suffering from localized dissociative amnesia as she could recall what happened to her for the last three weeks. She only remembers walking by the lake. Thus this shows the condition of dissociative amnesia.
Answer:
Ski's and ski boots
Explanation:
What is one good that can be considered a complement for another?
Most believe it originated from Norse Mythology.
The Norse Mythology goes like this:
Goddess Frigga, goddess of love, has a son named Balder, god of summer sun.
One day, Balder had a dream of death and told his mother about it. She was greatly alarmed because if Balder dies, being a god of summer sun, all life on earth will die too. So, she went to air, water, fire, earth and all the animals and plants to seek their promise not to harm her son, Balder. Unfortunately, she overlooked the mistletoe.
Mistletoes are hemiparasites. They grow on tree trunks or tree branches.
Loki, god of evil, the ultimate enemy of Balder used the mistletoe as an arrow tip and gave the arrow to Hoder, the blind god of winter, to shoot Balder. Hoder did and struck Balder dead.
With the earth's life forms gradually fading and unsuccessfully trying to revive Balder's body, Goddess Frigga held Balder's body and shed tears for him which revived him back to life. The tears fell on the mistletoe and turned into white berries.
Expressing her joy of having her son back, Goddess Frigga kissed everyone who passed under the tree where the mistletoe grew.
The story ended with a decree that whoever stands under the mistletoe, no harm shall befall them, only a kiss, a token of love.