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Lostsunrise [7]
3 years ago
9

Loyalty to ones country or to people with a common language religion and history is known as

History
1 answer:
Lady bird [3.3K]3 years ago
8 0
<span>nationalism might be the answer</span>
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12. What role did immigrants play in building the railroads?
wlad13 [49]

Answer: hiiiiii

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
What do scientist think contributed to the development of language?
scoundrel [369]

Answer: Read vvv

Explanation:

As it’s impossible to track words and linguistic ability directly through the archaeological record, scientists have previously attempted to study the evolution of language through “proxy indicator” skills, such as early art or the ability to make more sophisticated tools. The authors of the new study, a team of scientists led by Thomas Morgan, a psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley, took a different approach. Rather than consider toolmaking solely a proxy for language ability, the team explored how language might help modern humans learn to make tools using the same techniques their early ancestors did.

In the experiment, the scientists took 184 volunteers—students from the University of St. Andrews in the United Kingdom—and broke them into five groups; archaeologists then instructed the first person in the technique known as Oldowan stone-knapping. Oldowan tools, named for the famous Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, where archaeologists Louis and Mary Leakey discovered the implements in the 1930s, were widespread among early humans between 2.5 and 1.8 million years ago. The technique consisted of striking a stone “hammer” against a stone “core” to flake off pieces and create a sharp edge that could be used to cut, chop and scrape; the flakes themselves were also sharp enough to use for cutting plants and butchering animals.

Each of the five groups proceeded in different ways: In the first, a pair of volunteers were simply given the stone “core,” a hammer and some examples of flakes, then told to go about their business without guidance. In the second group, the second student learned how to make the tools by simply watching his fellow volunteer (who had been taught the technique) and trying to duplicate his actions without communication. In the third, the volunteers showed each other what they were doing but with no talking or gesturing. The fourth group was allowed to gesture and point, while in the fifth group, the “teacher” was allowed to say whatever he or she wanted to the other volunteers. In the next round of the experiment, the learner became the teacher, creating five different “chains” of transmission; in all, the volunteers produced more than 6,000 stone flakes.

According to the results of the study, published this week in the journal Nature Communications, the first group predictably had very little success when left to their own devices. What was striking, however, was that performance improved very little among those who simply watched their fellow volunteers make the tools. Only those who were allowed to gesture and talk while teaching performed significantly better than the baseline the scientists had established. By one measurement, gesturing doubled the likelihood that a student would produce a viable stone flake in a single strike, while verbal teaching quadrupled that likelihood.

Taking their results into consideration, researchers concluded that early humans might have developed the beginnings of spoken language–known as a proto-language–in order to successfully teach and pass along the ability to make the stone tools they needed for their survival. Such capacity to communicate would have been necessary, they suggest, for our ancestors to make the rapid leap from the Oldowan toolmaking process to more advanced stone tools, which occurred around 2 million years ago.

Dietrich Stout, an archaeologist at Emory University in Atlanta, praised the new study’s innovation, telling Science magazine that “a major strength of the paper is that it adopts an experimental approach to questions that have otherwise largely been addressed through intuition or common sense.” Still, Stout and other scientists urge caution before taking the study’s conclusions at face value without more direct proof. For one thing, the study’s conclusions don’t take into account that the modern volunteers have grown up with language, so it could be expected that they would learn more effectively with it than without; this may not have been true for early humans.

hoped it helped :D

8 0
3 years ago
Which behavior did Nixon excuse using executive privilege?
Rina8888 [55]

Answer: Refusing to hand over the White House tapes

Explanation:  What were the three reasons that Nixon gave for refusing to turn over the White House tapes? Nixon stated that the dispute was between the president and special prosecutor, making it an executive branch conflict and not for judicial resolution. He also stated that it was up to the president, and not the court, to confirm the scope of the executive privilege. The need for for executive confidentiality justified his privilege in this case

took test -100%

8 0
3 years ago
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How do new technology (tools) and new innovations (ideas) improve and harm the world? How do new technology (tools) and new inno
kirill [66]

Answer:

technology can helpful improve by making useful resources for example a computer is a useful resource because it helps us figure out things we need to know or help us communicate from long distances

technology  can be harmful because it can cause pollution in our world and kill things for example a factory with machines that need fuel such as coal or burn things can cause smoke in the air and pollute our ecosystem

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
What were the arguments put forth by conservatives who opposed the feminist movement such as Phyllis Schlafly?
Serhud [2]

Conservatives opposed the feminist movement on the ground that it would break the traditional roles.

Explanation:

The Conservative opposition of the people in the feminist movement stemmed from their deep hatred of the new norms that hey wanted to bring in which included the quality of women with men and their education.

This was believed by them to be against the family values of the west and also the structure of the society that would be undermined by such an upheaval.

Ultimately, this argument had proven tootles against the call for equality.

3 0
3 years ago
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