I think it changes for when the southern people get most of their delegates or maybe when there's most issues going on in the houses of representatives.
weather conditions, social pressure, economic mismanagement, and radical agricultural changes
The answer is more because according to the definition of the theory of social facilitation, social facilitation is the tendency for people who are being watched or observed to perform better than they would alone on simple tasks (or tasks they know how to do very well due to repetition).
Answer: more
Idn't Spain have more colonies in Africa?
OK. During the era of exploration, the Portuguese were sailing around the coast of Africa and began their colonies in Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde and Sao Tome y Principe. By the 1500's, Spain was preoccupied by explanding their empire in the Americas. Africa was then ignored for centuries before the introduction of quamine, which allowed Europeans to travel inland in Africa without dropping like flies from malaria. Hence, in the 1870's the scramble for Africa began! The British and French, the two largest Western powers of the day, took the most land in Africa. Germany too took colonies...Cameroon, Tanzania, Togo and Namibia were German colonies before WWI. Even Belgium took the Congo (they actually began the Scramble for Africa after circumnaviagting the Congo River). After WWI, they would also take Rwanda and Burundi from the Germans.
Answer:
Her experience best illustrates the agitating effects of an obsession.
Explanation:
An obsession refers to a series of <em>intrusive, unwanted and irrational thoughts </em>which tend to "plague" an individual's mind, often having his/her main focus. These tend to <em>trigger uneasiness</em> in the individual or even <em>distressed. </em>
In this case, Mrs. Swift's intrusive and irrational thought that her house is contaminated by germs is a clear example of an obsession which could even trigger <em>compulsions</em>, such as extreme hygiene.
This could develop into <em>OCD or an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. </em>