2. D - furthermore
<span>3. H - Meanwhile </span>
<span>4. E - in the distance </span>
<span>5. C - First </span>
<span>6. B - therefore </span>
<span>7. F - in other words </span>
<span>8. A - for instance </span>
Answer:
Since there is nothing underlined, I will identify the part of speech for every word.
Dolley - proper noun
Madison - proper noun
the - definite article
wife - common noun, singular, countable
of - preposition
the - definite article
fourth - adjective
United States - proper noun
president - common noun, singular, countable
is - present form of the auxiliary verb to be in third person
one - cardinal number
of - preposition
history`s - abstract noun, singular, countable (possessive form - Saxon genitive)
many - adjective
interesting - adjective
women - common noun, plural, countable
The rising action in a story is :
A series of events that lead to the climax.
Based on evidence from the opening scene and the scene about the chestnuts and the sailor's wife in act i scene iii, the reader can conclude: "the witches have evil tendencies and will likely harm Macbeth in some way".
<h3>King of Scotland in Act 1 and 2 Summary:</h3>
- King Duncan of Scotland seeks information from a wounded captain at a military outpost close to his palace at Forres regarding the conflict between the Scots and the Irish invaders, led by the rebel Macdonwald.
- The captain responds that the Scottish generals Macbeth and Banquo battled with tremendous heroism and ferocity while assisting Duncan's son Malcolm in escaping captivity by the Irish.
- Duncan is next given a description by the captain of how Macbeth killed the treacherous Macdonwald.
- The thane of Ross, a Scottish nobleman, enters and informs the king that the treacherous thane of Cawdor has been vanquished and the army of Norway has been repulsed as the captain is being brought away to receive treatment for his injuries.
- Duncan orders the execution of Cawdor's thane and the granting of Cawdor's throne to Macbeth, the army's hero. Ross departs to tell Macbeth the news.
To know more about act 1 and act 2 of macbeth, here
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Answer:
- Any behavior that is accidentally reinforced is more likely to be repeated.
Explanation:
Superstitious behavior could be described as <u>'a behavior that is reinforced coincidentally due to temporal contiguity/closeness between an independent behavior and the distribution of reinforcer.'</u> Skinner, the famous psychologist, showed this through his experiment in which the 'rats were susceptible to human behavior as they knew that arriving at that place would assist them in getting the food'(however, not being related directly). Such behavior exemplifies the superstitious behavior(that has been reinforced on rats accidentally) which makes them behave in a certain way to get the desired results(food).