Answer:
<em>Dickens, the novel, which spans action in the cities of London and Paris</em>
Explanation:
In context, which is the best version of the underlined portion of sentence 1 (reprinted below)? A Tale of Two Cities, the second of only two historical novels written by Charles Dickens, the novel spans action in the cities of London and Paris during the years 1775–1793.
A Tale of Two Cities dates back to the previous century and sets it stories in the beginning of the French Revolution. Paris is embodied as a city where corruption by the political leaders leads revolutionaries to rise up against the powerful but the violence that replaces that corruption is worse. The London of the book is relatively peaceful and quiet in a village of Soho where a loving family was raised by Charles Darnay and Lucie Manette.
Going back to the question
In context, which is the best version of the underlined portion of sentence 1 (reprinted below)?
Dickens, the novel, which spans action in the cities of London and Paris
will be perfect
<span>i would of said a milliner but since it is a six letter word i would say a hatter</span>
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Answer: D. Anticipates events
Explanation: Classical conditioning is actually a type of learning where a conditioned stimulus, one given under a condition, elicits some unconditional stimulation and becomes associated with that unconditioned stimulus after several repetitions. That unconditional stimulus, prior to these repetitions of conditioned stimuli, had nothing to do. After several repetitions of the conditional stimulus, a conjunction of the conditioned and unconditioned stimulus occurs, whereby the unconditioned stimulus becomes a behavioural response called a conditional response.
In other words, conditioned learning achieves connection, that is, association / associative learning of, previously, unrelated stimuli, and then a certain association is obtained, that is, a response to a particular stimulus. Therefore, conditioning that encourages associative learning acquires learned connections and associations that can predict events, which are actually learned responses to particular stimuli.