The economy of Ancient Egypt was based on agriculture, as most of the people were farmers. Due to Nile's flooding, the Egyptians managed to create surplus of food, which they could story or trade for other goods. The growth of Egyptian economy was mostly achieved through improving farming techniques, such as through irrigation.
A person who feels very good after receiving a compliment, but very bad after being insulted, would sore high on measures of
<u> "self-esteem variability".</u>
The connection of self-esteem variability to identity, state of mind, and conduct was explored. Self-esteem variability was estimated by figuring the standard deviation of self-appraisals made amid seven days of experience-examining. Members high in self-esteem variability were reluctant, socially on edge, and avoidant of social settings. Confidence fluctuation was mostly free of the theoretically comparative attribute of affect-intensity.
Answer:
More people practice Sikhism, Buddhism, and Hinduism than you would think by looking at a map of world religions.
Explanation:
If we look at the map that presents regions that practice a certain religion, we will only see countries and areas that consist of people who majorly practice a certain religion.<u> These maps do not show the concentration of the population in the countries and do not show us the number of believers. </u>
We might believe there is a much larger Christian population because some very large countries such as Russia, Canada, and the US are all majorly Christian.
However, <u>these countries are not as densely populated as some of the Asian countries, such as India, China, and Japan.</u>
<u>Because of the population density, there are actually many more people who practice major religions of Asia, including Sikhism, Buddhism, and Hinduism than we think</u>. Map of religions won’t show us the number of believers, but if <u>we look at the concentration of people and population instead of geographical area, we will get the true numbers of believers.</u>
According to psychologist Shelley Taylor, women respond to
stress with a behavioral pattern she calls: Tend-and-Befriend, Shelley Taylor argues that men and women respond to stress with
a fundamentally different behavioral pattern. Women are mostly to
use emotion-focused coping strategies than men.