In the scenario above, both Gina and Frank has been describing what the abstract painting portrays and both of them had a different conclusion of what it really looks like. Their experience reminded them the projective test which they learned in the introductory psychology, where the projective testing is a test where they show images or words to a person to describe what the person would feel or what he or she describes or responds to what is being shown to them.
Answer:either d or c
Explanation:
i’m sure it’s one of those:)
Answer:
A. Turning off the lights whenever you go to bed.
B. Unplugging things you do not use (example; Toaster Oven, Lamp, and Curling Iron.)
C. Only use Air Conditioning to the rooms that need it most.
hope this answer correct (^^)
Today Canada is the most multi-cultural country in the world, and the home of immigrants of every ethnic and religious group from every country in the world.
But less than 500 years ago, the only people living in Canada were the Aboriginal people of Canada. "Aboriginal" means the original inhabitants, the people who were here first. The words "Native" or "Indigenous" are also used, and mean the same thing.
Today they all collectively refer to themselves as the First Nations or First Peoples of Canada. However, there are many different cultural groups.
Canada’s first people used at least 53 different languages. Each group referred to themselves by a specific name in their own language.
For instance, the Inuit - colloquially know for years as Eskimos - have always referred to themselves as Inuit - the People. Or in the singular as an Inuk - a person.
ANSWER:
In the middle of the 18th century, creoles of Spanish origin controlled a good part of commerce and agrarian property, so they had great economic power and great social consideration, but were displaced from the main political positions in favor of those born in Spain. .
Explanation:
The "economic independence" made that the Creoles could have more liberties, reason why several of them amassed great fortunes. Even in the religious field the differences between peninsular and creoles were drastically reduced. Many creoles became black veiled nuns, abbesses, etc. and the men came to occupy important positions in the archbishopric.
The children of the Spaniards born in America - Creoles - gradually increased in number and swelled the highest social class. In the 18th century, they began to call themselves Americans and fervently disputed the main public positions with the peninsular. This struggle cracked the unity and interests that had united the white group in previous centuries, sowing the seed for the emancipation of the American colonies.
Creole and peninsular were never very numerous. In the middle of the 16th century there were about 150,000 of them in Spanish America, a figure that increased to 660,000 averaging the following century. Only at the beginning of the 18th century did the white population exceed one million inhabitants.
But it was not only money that determined social stratification during the colonial era. From the first moments of the conquest, the Spanish joined the aboriginal women sexually, thus creating the mestizo.