Answer:
Toothpastes generally contain the following components: Water (20–40%) Abrasives (50%) including aluminum hydroxide, calcium hydrogen phosphates, calcium carbonate, silica and hydroxyapatite. Fluoride (usually 1450 ppm) mainly in the form of sodium fluoride.
Answer: by putting restrictions that limit behaviours that may interfer with other people right or with even your own right
Explanation:
Restrictions or restrictive rules are put forward to monitor each right and make it fall in line with what is acceptable standard of behaviour for example every person has a right to drive at a particular age but still they have to follow road rules in order to be safe and limit their speed or any unacceptable behaviour on the road but also to ensure that others around them are safe.
Answer:
Fixation
a n a l
Explanation:
Sigmund Freud was the founder of the psychoanalytic school of therapy which focuses on the unconscious which dictates most of our behavior and also focuses on the events from our childhood and how these events affect our adult behavior.
One of the main concepts of this theory is the concept of fixation, this term refers to the phenomenon that occurs when one person gets "stuck" in a stage of development because there was either a lack of attention during this period or too much attention.
On the other hand, according to the psychosexual stages proposed by Sigmund Freud, the a n a l stage takes place from 18 months of age to three years of age and it's during this period where "potty training" starts. When this training gets too rigid, it can cause an a n a l fixation.
In this example, Jordyn will be 2 in a few weeks and her mother has a strict toilet training procedures in which Jordyn is immediately punished when she has an "accident". We can see that <u>Jordyn is in the a n a l stage of development (because of her age) and her potty training is too rigid</u>, therefore, she might end up having a fixation at the a n a l stage of psychosexual development.
Answer: About 6%
Explanation: Over the course of a decade, about ten million Americans changed the way they identify themselves ethnically or racially. That is the main conclusion of a study that compared the information that 168 million people filled in the 2000 and 2010 censuses. Some reason why Americans did this changes were, mainly, personal decisions or government benefits.