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Mandarinka [93]
3 years ago
5

Traditions, food, transportation, language, clothing, art, and institutions are examples of a person's ______________.. . . A. b

iological nature. . B. political nature. . C. culture. . D. status.
Social Studies
2 answers:
pentagon [3]3 years ago
6 0

the correct answer is C. culture (just took the test)

lorasvet [3.4K]3 years ago
3 0
<span>The answer for the question above is letter "C. culture". What makes a group of people different from another are their cultures. That is composed of how they speak to one another, how they express themselves through arts and food. </span>
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While reading about George Sperling's research investigating visual sensory storage, Umar is surprised to find out that one part
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Answer:

The correct answer is : A. a longer delay between when participants saw the three rows and when they had to report one of them

Explanation:

Sensory memory refers to the memory just long enough to be transferred to short-term memory. It happens when the sense of sight holds a visual image for less than a second. The brain retains impressions of sensory information after the experience has ended. When you gather what comes from the environment they are retained accurately, but very briefly by the use or our senses

8 0
3 years ago
Which of the following was not an important commercial city of
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Answer:

Delhi

Explanation:

Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras were located near the ocean, which made them a desirable location for trading ports.

Bombay became the main trade destination for the countries on the west side of India,  (such as African countries and western Europe)

Calcutta became the main trade destination for countries on the south side of India (East Asian countries)

and Madras became the main trade destination for the countries on east side of India (countries in South East Asia)

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3 years ago
In colonial America, enslaved workers who received manumission purchased their freedom. escaped to northern colonies. were freed
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Answer:

In colonial America, enslaved workers who received manumission were freed by slave owners.

Explanation:

Manumission is the name given to the process of freeing a slave, after which he became a freedman. A slave, by affection, rendered favors, merits, personal qualities, good will of the owner, could become a freedman. Most of the freedmen simply climbed a step in the social stratification, going on to make a living with their work, so many of them continued to work for their previous owners, now employers.

8 0
3 years ago
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Which of the following terms is defined as a legal defense against criminal responsibility when a person,a) who was not already
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The answer of the question is (a) who was not already predisposed to it

Explanation:

<u>Entrapment </u>is the term used to define legal defense against criminal responsibility , a person who is Induced or forced to commit a crime by his law enforcement officer or by his own agent.

3 0
3 years ago
How did Socrates, Plato and Aristotle influence the world’s democracies?
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Answer:

Socrates  (470-399) was the son of a sculptor and a midwife, and served with distinction in the Athenian army during Athens’ clash with Sparta.  He married, but had a tendency to fall in love with handsome young men, in particular a young soldier named Alcibiades.  He was, by all accounts, short and stout, not given to good grooming, and a lover of wine and conversation.  His famous student, Plato, called him “the wisest, and justest, and best of all men whom I have ever known” (Phaedo).

He was irritated by the Sophists and their tendency to teach logic as a means of achieving self-centered ends, and even more their promotion of the idea that all things are relative.  It was the truth that he loved, desired, and believed in. Plato (437-347) was Socrates’ prized student.  From a wealthy and powerful family, his actual name was Aristocles -- Plato was a nickname, referring to his broad physique. When he was about twenty, he came under Socrates’ spell and decided to devote himself to philosophy.  Devastated by Socrates’ death, he wandered around Greece and the Mediterranean and was taken by pirates.  His friends raised money to ransom him from slavery, but when he was released without it, they bought him a small property called Academus to start a school -- the Academy, founded in 386.

The Academy was more like Pythagoras’ community -- a sort of quasi-religious fraternity, where rich young men studied mathematics, astronomy, law, and, of course, philosophy. It was free, depending entirely on donations. True to his ideals, Plato also permitted women to attend!  The Academy would become the center of Greek learning for almost a millennium. Aristotle (384-322) was born in a small Greek colony in Thrace called Stagira.  His father was a physician and served the grandfather of Alexander the Great.  Presumably, it was his father who taught him to take an interest in the details of natural life.

He was Plato’s prize student, even though he disagreed with him on many points.  When Plato died, Aristotle stayed for a while with another student of Plato, who had made himself a dictator in northern Asia Minor.  He married the dictator’s daughter, Pythias.  They moved to Lesbos, where Pythias died giving birth to their only child, a daughter.  Although he married again, his love for Pythias never died, and he requested that they be buried side by side.

For four years, Aristotle served as the teacher of a thirteen year old Alexander, son of Philip of Macedon.  In 334, he returned to Athens and established his school of philosophy in a set of buildings called the Lyceum (from a name for Apollo).  The beautiful grounds and covered walkways were conducive to leisurely walking discussions, so the students were named for the peripatoi (“covered walkways”).

Explanation:

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3 years ago
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