Answer:
The countryman in the Chinese tale showed an angry, hostile, and stingy attitude/emotion.
Explanation:
The countryman in the Chinese tale, 'The Wonderful Pear Tree", showed a very angry and hostile attitude towards the beggarly Priest that approached him for help. He was also very stingy because he refused to grant the poor man the request of just a pear from the many pears that he had in is barrow.
The Priest also taught him a hard lesson, when in an unexpected way, he distributed his pears to everyone in the crowd, only for the countryman to go back to his barrow and find that one of its handles was gone and along with all of his pears.
Answer:
EIN.
Ich hoffe das ist richtig.
(A.
I hope this is correct.)
Explanation:
Answer:
I think it would be all of the above, if you could provide a passage with the question it would be helpful. But I'm not 100% sure if it would be all of the above.
a contingency break; inattentional blindness
This scene is an example of a contingency break. A contingency break is when, in a piece of media (usually children movies or TV shows) a scene occurs that is immediately retconned in the next scene. A common example of this is in children's cartoons, when a character may have gotten their clothes dirty in one scene, but they are back to normal in the next with no time for them to have been cleaned. This applies to the movie <em>Shrek</em>, as the three blind mice are turned into horses in one frame, but are back to the status quo in the next.
Inattentional blindness is the failure to notice a fully visible, but unexpected, object/action because one's attention was on another object/action. A contingency break can be considered a "real-life" example of inattentional blindness because, if this scene occurred in real-life, you would not notice the mice turning back to normal as your attention was not focused on them.
North Atlantic treaty organization