Maybe you should try contacting his/her parents and seeing whats going on or unfortunatly he could've broke up with you without actually telling you he broke up with you.
Answer:
The correct answer is - Consequences require accepting an outcome.
Explanation:
In the decision-making process, the cost is the manner, way, or course the way something is done whereas the consequences are something that follows it depend on or the cause of the process.
Cost can be giving up something, it can be positive or negative but it is not something that is not available or have to accept. Whereas the result or outcome is the consequences of the decision or choice that required to be accepted as it is not confirmed in the process.
Yes it was justifiable
1. they needed food
2. they needed more cloth (clothing)
sorry this is all i got for you hope this is at least a little helpful :)
The amount of a good or service available in a market at a given price is known as <u>"supply".</u>
The measure of a good in the market is the supply, and the sum individuals need to purchase is the demand.
Supply refers to the how much the market can offer. The amount provided alludes to the measure of a specific good makers will supply while getting a specific cost. The connection among's cost and the amount of a good is provided to the market is known as the supply relationship. Cost, in this manner, is an impression of supply and demand.
In the early civilization there was an upper and lower class relationship between government and social classes. Early civilizations came in existence in Lower Mesopotamia in 3000 BCE followed by "Egyptian civilization" (3000 BCE) along the Nile, Harappan (Indus Valley) civilization in the Indus River Valley (in Asian continent and at present time India and Pakistan, 2500 BCE).
The Chinese civilization established with "yellow and Yangtze Rivers" in 2200 BCE. In the recent times archeologists are searching in Tamil Nadu (India), found some vassals and other things which may have a connection with Indus Valley civilization.