B) <span>He tells him that he doesn’t mind killing another human</span>
COMPLETE QUESTION:
A psycholinguist conducts an experiment with a group of participants from a small village in Asia and another from a small village in South America. She asked the groups to describe the bands of color they saw in a rainbow and found they reported the same number of bands as their language possessed primary color words. These results:
Group of answer choices
(a) support the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
(b) contradict the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
(c) support the word frequency effect
(d) contradict the word frequency effect
ANSWER: SUPPORT THE SAPIR-WHORF HYPOTHESIS.
EXPLANATION:
SAPIR-WHORF HYPOTHESIS is also referred to as the “linguistic determinism hypothesis”.
The hypothesis stated that language and it's structure directly influence or limit the knowledge and thinking capacities of it speakers.
Thus, the experiments underwent by the psycholinguist support SAPIR-WHORF HYPOTHESIS, since the two group of participants described the same bands of color seen in the rainbow, because their language incorporate the primary color words.
Answer:
Cabinet Ministers, Ministers of State and Deputy Ministers.
Explanation:
Answer: c. Is the time to make a decision related to the quality of a player's hand.
Explanation: in a poker game the time to make a decisions is when "the clock has been called", at this time, the player has a limited amount of time to make a decision. So at this point his hand is termed a dead hands, and this can determine how professional a player is, if his hands keep focused and stable or shaking.
The best way she can record their performance using non-verbal cueing is by observing their hands when the clock has been called (that's the time to make a decision ).
So she can table her research to be "How stable the hand is at the time to make a decision, determines how professional the player is".
It influenced the life of the colonies because different places could grow different things. It's kind of like diversity, but in the 1700's.