If "y" represents the monthly salary of a salesman then we can rearrange the equation so that "y" is in evidence:
y=2000+100x
If he sells no computers and "x" is the number of computer systems he sells, then x=0.
y=2000+100*0 <=> y=2000+0 <=> y=2000
If the salesman sells no computers, his monthly salary is of 2000.
Answer:
The trolley problem is a series of thought experiments in ethics and psychology, involving stylized ethical dilemmas of whether to sacrifice one person to save a larger number. Opinions on the ethics of each scenario turn out to be sensitive to details of the story that may seem immaterial to the abstract dilemma. The question of formulating a general principle that can account for the differing moral intuitions in the different variants of the story was dubbed the "trolley problem" in a 1976 philosophy paper by Judith Jarvis Thomson.
Explanation:
Answer:
C). Social learning.
Explanation:
Social learning is demonstrated as the learning that is associated with learning through social or environmental impact. Such learned behavior(new) comes from monitoring and imitating the social behaviors instead of reinforcing a specific behavior.
As per the question, the young bobcats learning to exemplify 'social learning' as they are trying to learn how to hunt by observing their mother while hunting the rabbit and attempting to imitate evokes the newly learned behavior that exemplifies 'social learning'. Thus, <u>option C</u> is the correct answer.
She is heartbroken, and he is relieved
1. A ballad is a style of verse - usually a musical narrative. The poem "Because I could not stop for Death," by Emily Dickinson, fits into this category due to the combination of iambic meter lines of three and four feet or stressed syllables, which create a hymn-like poem. For example:
Because I could not stop for Death (4 sylables)
He kindly stopped for me (3 syllables)
The Carriage held but just Ourselves (4 syllables)
And Immortality. (3 syllables)
2. The speaker has a flirting relationship with the character Death, which takes the shape of a courteous admirer. She feels very comfortable with him, although she is undressed, since the date with Death took her by surprise that morning.