Answer:
the correct answer is pollinate
Answer:
A right is unenumerated if it is C. assumed to be a fundamental right.
Explanation:
In the United States legal system, the Ninth Amendment as well as the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protect against the infringement of <u>unenumerated rights</u>, that are those fundamental legal rights that are not expressly coded but are indeed inferred from other existing laws like the Constitution and, consequently, recognized by the U.S. legal system.
The Supreme Court of the United States found among the <u>unenumerated rights</u> the right to travel, the right to keep personal matters private and the right to make decisions about one's body or health.
Actually, I would argue that to some extend all of them are true:
An opinion is a personal view or attitude.
-this is definitely true, it's basically a definition of an opinion
An opinion is often indicated by the use of adjectives.
-this is true! for example "my teacher is nice"
An opinion is often used as evidence in a news article.
-this is the weakest statement (but I think that it's still not false). I would however choose this as the right answer: opinion is not an evidence for anything except this opinion ( so it's valid for example for the news of "the president thinks that" if the opinion is that of the president.
An opinion has the potential to promote bias.
- this is true!
The court of international trade has c.9 judges.
The answer is social cognition. It is a sub-topic of social psychology that emphasizes on how an individual deal, put, and relate information about other individuals and social circumstances. It centers on the part that cognitive processes play in our communications. The way we ponder about others shows a foremost role in how we reflect, sense, and interrelate with the world around us.