Psychology Major here! :) Hope this helps:
1) Up to date, there is still no definite answer when it comes the capacity of information a brain can withhold - it is truly unlimited.
2) The size of a brain varies between species and its capacity to retain information varies as well.
3) Humans have the most complex psychological process to understand, however, there are many other species who have incredible cognitive intelligence. (Such as dolphins, for example.)
4) When damage is done to a certain side of the brain and there is a need to remove the damaged area, there is a possibility that the undamaged parts of the brain can take over the same functions as the removed area. (Therefore, for example, the remaining part of your brain can still nearly function to a maximum capacity depending of the severity of damage... as well as area).
5) The brain named itself "brain".
(The brain controls you, but you control the brain.)
<span>+Use a logical format and wide margins, clean type and clear headings
+Selectively apply bold and italic typeface that help guide the reader's eye
<span>+Use bullets to call attention to important points (i.e. accomplishments)
+</span></span><span>Focus on what you did in the job, NOT what your job was there's a difference
+Include a one or two top line job description first, then list your accomplishments
+For each point ask yourself, What was the benefit of having done what I did?Accomplishments should be unique to you, not just a list of what someone else did
+Avoid using the generic descriptions of the jobs you originally applied for or held</span>
1) While Patrick set the table
2) If he is running late
3) Before she boarded the plane
A <em>Dependent Clause</em> is a clause that cannot work by itself as a complete logical sentence, but has a nominal, adjectival, or adverbial function within a larger sentence. Also called Subordinate Clause.
Answer:
What do you like most about your job.
Explanation:
In a formal setting this is the best answer to pick since it stays on topic.
William Blake uses personification to portray winter as:
A monster.
"Lo! now the direful monster". Winter is represented as a monster, as an agent of evil that ignores the poet and lives on the depths of a volcano (the mount Hecla). The imagery used by Blake also adds notes of darkness and control by the use of doors, habitations and a sceptre of the world.