<span>apan as a have-not country felt the distribution of natural resources in the world was unfair and in Manchuria and China proper saw its opportunity to right the balance. The need for a larger economic base was closely linked with Japanese conceptions of coming wars, the effect of the great depression and a rise in anti-Japanese feeling in China. Japan, while making strides in Manchuria, never met its goal of economic self-sufficiency. Tied down in China by a military quagmire it had neither the time nor the surplus resources to invest in creating the self-sufficient empire it so desired.</span>
Answer:
15 to 20 seconds
Explanation:
Since its primarily used to selection, initiation, and termination of new information that we receive, The short-term memory only capable in holding a small amount of information within a short period of time. The information in short term memory only last between 15-30 seconds (30 is the high end of the spectrum, average people only able to store it for 15 to 20 seconds). Keep repeating the information in our head will refresh the shelf life of this memory, adding a new 15-30 seconds every time we do so.
To move this memory into long-term memory, Roger could do either of these things:
1. Adding some sort of meaning to the information. Whether it's an emotional attachment or something that applicable in his previous long-term memory.
or
2. He could make himself encounter this information daily (such as looking at it every time he wakes up for the next couple of weeks)
Answer:
Resistance (i.e., war and military resistance); sometimes this included attempts to draw upon supernatural solutions to avoid or to undo conquest.
Acquiescence—often this meant trying to negotiate the best terms possible;
Alliance—sometimes it was possible to join with the Europeans in conquest of neighbours (often traditional enemies with whom they had long been in conflict anyway).
Explanation:
(I gave three)
Answer:
black and white and your's dude