Answer:
- Giving money instead of gifts on marriages.
- Giving money to children on special religious events.
- Financially helping relatives or friends during medical emergencies.
- Giving a present at the birth of a new child.
Explanation:
These social norms might sound like they are present in many other societies. If you are more specific about your culture or the country/sub-continent you belong to, I will be able to give more culture specific norms.
The Phoenician geography made them rely on imports and exports because of they lack in farmland and their close proximity to the Mediterranean.
The Phoenicians subsisted on a narrow strip of the Syrian coast. This land consists of highlands and mountains with a munificence of forests. However, it lacks the productive land which would have made large-scale cultivation possible.
Due to the inadequate size of their territory, the Phoenicians relied on the sea and commerce to sustain their living. The lack of sufficient farmland drove the Phoenicians to turn to the sea and became navigators and traders, which resulted in their establishing many colonies. They traded silver, lead, horses, ebony, iron, tin, ivory, and precious stones.
The three-component theory of stratification, more widely known as Weberian stratification or the three class system, was developed by German sociologist Max Weber with class, status and power as distinct ideal types. Weber developed a multidimensional approach to social stratification that reflects the interplay among wealth, prestige and power.
Weber argued that power can take a variety of forms. A person's power can be shown in the social order through their status, in the economic order through their class, and in the political order through their party. Thus, class, status and party are each aspects of the distribution of power within a community.
Class, status and power have not only a great deal of effect within their individual areas but also a great deal of influence over the other areas.