Battle of Waterloo was the final defeat
As the numbers or data necessary to answer this question are not included, we are not able to make calculations based on this question. However, we are still able to think of the question and develop a theory about the answers without the need for calculations.
People who have "exclusionary attitudes" are usually those who are not accepting of people with different ideas or values, or people who are different from themselves (ethnicity, gender, etc.). Such people are generally not accepting of strangers, and have a hard time opening up their social circle.
It is very likely that attending college and being exposed to "outsiders" has an impact on such exclusionary attitudes. It is likely that people who are exposed to "outsiders" are more likely to become accostumed to them, and thus feel less threatened by their presence. This people are also more likely to eventually accept such "outsiders" as members of their circle.
I believe the answer is: Traits
In this context, A traits refers to the characteristics that we use to describe the quality of a certain individual.
The characteristics that we use could include both personalities or physical characteristics that may influence other people perception toward that individual.
Answer:Large trucks cannot turn without first swinging wide in the opposite direction.
Explanation: if you overtake or cut into open space between the truck and the curb it is likely that you will crash or hit your car into the long tail of the truck and you may lose your life so waiting is worth saving your life.
This doesn't occur before the formal operational stage.
According to Jean Piaget, a Swiss psychologist, every person goes through 4 developmental stages:
- sensorimotor : birth - 24 months
- preoperational: 24 months - age 7
- concrete operational: 7 - 14
- formal operational: adolescence - adulthood
Only when we reach the final stage of development can we put ourselves in somebody else's shoes and see things from their perspective, according to Piaget.