Answer:hardiness
Explanation:Hardiness is a personality trait that is associated with a person’s ability to manage and respond to stressful life events with coping strategies that turn potentially unfortunate circumstances into learning opportunities. It is characterized by a tendency to be deeply involved, a need to be in control, and a desire to learn from life’s events regardless of the outcomes.
Hardiness is a personality construct composed of three traits – control, commitment, and challenge – that are theorized to make one resilient in the face of stress.
Answer:
A. Cherokee were a sovereign nation not subject to US federal or state laws.
Explanation:
C. taking as much time as necessary to deliver their message effectively
Answer:
E. have some notion of both object solidity and object permanence
Explanation:
Violation of Expectation is defined as the study of infact cognition. This is based on the infant habituation and dishabitution which helps to increase the stimuli of the baby from deducing that the event she expected didn't occur.
<em>For example, a baby that is aware that her toy car is gotten from a black box would be aware that the blue box that was placed in front of her from which a toy was to be gotten for her is different. </em>
She would be aware that her toy would not be in the blue box since it is not the box she is aware from which her toy is gotten. This shows that she has some notion of the object solidity and object permanence.
Shirley Jackson is most widely known for her chilling short story "The Lottery" but she also wrote the very charming, and in some ways disturbing, short story "Charles."
From the beginning of the story Laurie is portrayed as quite a rude and obnoxious little boy:
"At lunch he spoke insolently to his father, spilled his baby sister’s milk, and remarked that his teacher said we were not to take the name of the Lord in vain."
When asked about his first year in school Laurie can only talk about "Charles," who is always getting in trouble and bringing the wrath of the kindergarten teacher. Laurie has really invented Charles because he does not want to admit he has been acting out in school. Unfortunately, Laurie's mom never dreams that Laurie could actually be the class bully. She is obviously in a state of denial over the behavior of her son. She can only see "my sweet-voiced nursery-school tot" and not the boy that could "hit the teacher."
Throughout the story Jackson uses foreshadowing to show us that Laurie is not a well behaved child and the situational irony at the end of the story probably comes as no surprise to the reader. Of course, Laurie's mother may be shocked to learn that there is no Charles. She has not been able to recognize the evidence that her son is a brat because she loves him dearly and sometimes people fail to recognize the negative in those that are closest to them.