C. emotional stability.
A. Agreeableness is what it sounds like... Willing to be agreeable... Willing to agree.
B. Conscientiousness is also what it sounds like...to be conscious of what's going on around you and within you (external and internal locus of control).
D. Disposition is how you view things...how you "valence" something (valence means to label something as positive or negative); your response in context to disposition is usually stable and predictable over time.
E. Extraversion basically just refers to how social or outgoing you are.
Even though emotional stability is the correct answer, it's important to understand emotional stability (aka emotional regulation) is on a scale. We all feel angry, anxious, depressed, emotional, insecure, and excitable multiple times in our lives. These are normal human emotions! However, in psychology, we start to call it "abnormal", or say there's a "lack of emotional regulation/stability" when these types of negatively valenced emotions are pervasive in everyday life. This is why the question specifies "the DEGREE to which".
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Answer: Women played critical roles in the American Revolution and subsequent War for Independence. ... These women, known as camp followers, often tended to the domestic side of army organization, washing, cooking, mending clothes, and providing medical help when necessary. Sometimes they were flung into the vortex of battle
Explanation:
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The answer is that the person is known as "<span>Shaman".
A man who goes about as middle person between the common and otherworldly universes, utilizing enchantment to cure ailment, foresee the future, control profound powers, and so forth is known as shaman.This type of persons are particularly among certain innate people groups.
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Answer:
Chief Justice Earl Warren argued in the Brown decision that separate could never be equal because public education—which is a right for every citizen and deserved equal protection in accordance with the Fourteenth Amendment—had separate educational facilities for whites, and for blacks. This implied that both races were treated separately; being separated in such a way could not make them equally protected as expected by the constitution.