b. the company CEO and President
Answer:Anyway, these brain structures are considered to be primitive, I.e. They developed early in terms of evolution, and most animals - certainly mammals - have them.
You might be responsible for the function of each one, but in general they control things like hunger and thirst, emotion - including pleasure, sleep, some memory, and other complex autonomic systems such as diverting blood supply to GI tract after eating, helping regulate how much urine the kidneys produce vs. how much water they retain ( kidney function is very complicated and very fascinating).
Sorry I don't know the alignment of structure to function off the top of my head. The hypothalamus controls the release of hormones by the pituitary gland, like growth hormone, estrogen and testosterone, and even insulin, all by use of precursors.
You can bring in psychology with the emotions, survival drive, the drive to procreate - the complex and downright weird behaviors animals have developed to attract a mate, territoriality, etc. ooh, and paternal and maternal "instincts"!
Explanation:
The genre of the novel <em>"The Golden Cat"</em> written by Gabriel King, is considered to Fantasy Literature or Fiction.
The plot of the novel refers to an old prophecy that says that a is coming to heal the world.
The characters and some places of the novel are fiction, like "Wild Road", that is protected by Tag, a young cat that has to defend the Will Road from a supernatural Vortex, threatening the place, that is beyond the realm where humanity lives.
Other interesting novels that included cats: The Cat's Maw by Brooke Burgess, The Wild Road by Bagriel King and The Silent Miaow by Paul Gallico.
Answer and Explanation:
What "cage" did Lizabeth realize that her and her childhood companions were trapped in during the Great Depression?
Lizabeth is a character is Eugenia Collier's short story "Marigolds", set during the Great Depression. According to Lizabeth, who is also the narrator of the story, the cage in which she and the other children in story were trapped was poverty.
How did this "cage" limit Lizabeth and her companions, and how did they react to it as children?
<u>Lizabeth says poverty is a cage because it limits her and her companions. They know, unconsciously, that they will never grow out of it, that they will never be anything else other than very poor. However, since they cannot understand that consciously yet, the children and Lizabeth react to that reality with destruction. They channel their inner frustrations, project their anger outwards - more specifically, they destroy Miss Lottie's garden of marigolds.</u>
<em>"I said before that we children were not consciously aware of how thick were the bars of our cage. I wonder now, though, whether we were not more aware of it than I thought. Perhaps we had some dim notion of what we were, and how little chance we had of being anything else. Otherwise, why would we have been so preoccupied with destruction? Anyway, the pebbles were collected quickly, and everybody looked at me to begin the fun."</em>