Explanation:
It is not important only for what we speak but is important to what we write and how to say it. To communicate well this is only not enough to have well-organized ideas expressed concretely and coherently. One must also think about the style tone and clarity of his/her ideas and adapt these elements to read in public. To choose the effective language, the writer must be considered the objective of the documents
<u>Characteristics of an effective language:
</u>
- Concrete and specific not wide and vague.
- Concrete not verbose
- Familiar, not obscure
- Precise and clear not inaccurate and ambiguous
- Constructive, not destructive
- Appropriately formal.
In 1976, the United States of America celebrated it's Bicentennial. Good luck on your homework.
The correct answer is the learning perspective.
According to the learning perspective, fears and anxieties are a classically conditioned responses or learned responses. When a previously neutral stimulus is followed by an unpleasant or fear provoking stimulus, people develop a fear of previously neutral stimulus. Here, Andrea experiences anxiety when she approaches a lake, because she learned to fear lakes through a past fearful experience involving a lake.
Answer:
b head hjk ok no b go see f hi u resss do hi iknnhddhiuds can just it s so
The correct answer is "true."
If you mean that the Soviet Union participated in the negotiations and agreements to create the United Nations in 1945, then yes, the correct answer is true.
Indeed, the Soviet Union had an active participation with the creation of the UN and was part of the Security Council of the United Nations.
However, major differences between the USSR and the United States and Great Britain made the USSR keep its distance from western European countries and the United States. The Cold War had begun.
The western European countries founded NATO with the United States, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. On the other hand, the Soviet Union signed the Warsaw Pact with the Eastern European countries such as Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, and East Germany.