Answer:
If I were to make an idealized version of myself I would keep some of my original qualities. I would keep my personality mostly. I would want to change my behaviors. I would stop myself from procrasinating on everything, and would make myself actually know what I was doing during school. And just for funzies I would give myself an extremely high metabolism.. just so I could eat whatever I want.
Answer:
.d. He will think that cheating is a morally justifiable behavior.
Explanation:
John is caught cheating on an assignment that is a clear violation of school policy. He suffers no consequence. From a social cognitive perspective, John will believe cheating is morally justifiable because he suffered no consequence from the previous wrongdoing he engaged himself in.
If John was made to face disciplinary measures as a result of his cheating, he would have acknowledged and seen his wrong and understand that there are consequences for cheating but as he faced no consequences, he believes what he did was morally acceptable.
The reason we use monsters in literature then? The role they play? There is no singular one. But I personally believe that we use monsters to take everything we dislike about ourselves as humans, and also all of those animalistic instincts we suppress, and put them into one form. We lock those beings in a cupboard or shove them under our beds so that we never have to look at them. And we take them out when we want to create a story - when we want to speculate from far away and see what happens. In that regard, every piece of artwork ever developed starring a monster and a hero is a constructed, thoroughly planned social experiment.
The processes described in the question show how can we expand the sentence from many different aspects.<em> Nathan listened to music </em>is a given sentence. We can add information regarding when Nathan listened music, how he was listening, what was he listening to and what was his purpose. A possible example is: <em>Nathan was listening to pop music on Saturdays while he was relaxing. </em>
Idk what one is the answer but id think its past participle.