Answer: Yee
Explanation: I give free points too. If I feel like it.
I actually post quite difficult questions that yield quite a large amount of points.
Or simple, small questions that yield like, 5 points.
<h2>♨ANSWER♥</h2>
Cell phones have changed everyone’s lives since the 1980’s. Some of the cell phones we have today have internet so we can use them both, for work and for play. This is more than half of the time we spend. Cell phones change lives in a bad way because we become attached to them. They affect grammar and listening.
The apple company has come out with so many new apple products. That include about five different iphones. So many teens have the iphones now that everyone has been getting them. Having the iphone also helps kids to fit in. Even kids under thirteen have cell phones and text with them 24/7.
In some public schools kids use them during class and don’t even get in trouble. Even some teachers in public schools text during class or talk on the phone. So even adults are obsessed with their phones. If schools don’t take phones before school starts, then kids are going to think they can use their phones whenever they want. Teenagers are probably way more obsessed with their cell phones than adults though.
Cell phones also help us in a good way though. We are more connected with people than people back in the days were. If we want to talk to somebody we can just call them. When we’re out and we need to call our parents we can call them without having to use a friend’s phone and embarrassing yourself. Plus if we want to go somewhere we can call or text for a ride so we can also connect for travel easier too.
Cell phones are both good and bad for everyone. If we use them all day, everyday then thats a bad thing. If we use them for work or connection thats a good thing. We can use cell phones for many reasons. Cell phones can change everyone’s lives.
<u>☆</u><u>.</u><u>.</u><u>.</u><u>hope this helps</u><u>.</u><u>.</u><u>.</u><u>☆</u>
_♡_<em>mashi</em>_♡_
Answer:
The answer is A
Explanation:
In chapter 44 of<em> Little Women</em>
<em>Amy looked up at him, and was satisfied. Her little jealous fear
</em>
<em>vanished forever, and she thanked him, with a face full of love and
</em>
<em>confidence.
</em>
<em>"I wish we could do something for that capital old Professor.
</em>
<em>Couldn't we invent a rich relation, who shall obligingly die out there
</em>
<em>in Germany, and leave him a tidy little fortune?" said Laurie, when
</em>
<em>they began to pace up and down the long drawing room, arm in
</em>
<em>arm, as they were fond of doing, in memory of the chateau garden.</em>
Answer:
Mob mentality, herd mentality, pack mentality, groupthink, or crowd psychology — the concept has many names. These all boil down to the same idea: Individuals are influenced by a larger group. Regardless of whether that group includes people in your class, your neighborhood, or an entire nation, you may experience mob mentality.
In the 1950s, researchers conducted a famous conformity experiment that showed how readily people conform or change their behavior to match social norms. It involved:
Explanation: