Answer:
In the stage directions, we are provided with the setting of the play, a description of the attic space in which the Franks hid during the war, the current time setting (1945), a description of the Frank's belongings still present in the attic, and a brief, physical description of Mr. Frank.
or
The information presented in stage directions are what is on the stage, the characters movements, and the tone of voice. When the curtains rise there is a dusty room with overturned furniture and a small stairwell.
One way in which the ancient Sumerians, Egyptians, and Mayas are similar is that these civilizations developed irrigation systems.
Answer:
D expanding Georgia's railroad and mining industries
Explanation:
What policy would the Bourbon Triumvirate have MOST LIKELY supported?
A improving protections for Georgia's labor unions B extending voting rights to women and minorities C improving access to education for African Americans D expanding Georgia's railroad and mining industries
The Bourbon Triumvirate is the name given to group of individual's; Joseph E. Brown, Alfred H. Colquitt, and John B. Gordon who were once Georgia's three most powerful and prominent politicians of the post-Reconstruction era who wanted stronger economic ties with the Industrial North,They were all white supremacists and all supported industrial development.
Answer: True
Explanation:
Problem solving is the ability to profer or suggest ways by which a challenge can be addressed even though the solutions may not yet be taken. The solutions could be more than one but the plan or focus is to solve a problem.
This is the encoding stage, the first stage when we receive external input for memory. This can come in the form of visual stimuli, acoustic stimuli and semantic meaning of the event, it is when the situation is going on and the brain/mind is making sense of it, if there is no such event there cannot be an experience to think about in the future. At least semantic meaning must be coupled with the stimuli as we have to ascribe a meaning to the situations we come across, and in some, if not most cases, the three forms are coupled to form the basis of memory.
The other stages are storage and retrieval. The storage stage is related to how long, how well and how a given event interacts with other events in one's life. The last stage is the retrieval stage which is when we try to remember a given stuation.