The correct answer would be secure attachment. It is an attachment style that is characterized by children showing some distress or violent reaction when the one they are attached to are lost or away from them. They feel secure and protected when the things they are attached to are with them.
The answer to the question is that your social capital hasn’t expanded, or that you lost your chance to expand your social capital.
Social capital is defined as<em> resources that an individual gain by interacting with other people, which can come in the form of tangible and non-tangible resources, such as monetary aid, information, and ideas</em>. By not interacting with the police forces that were invited in the party, the individual in the question lost his chance to gain social capital to help him find a job in the criminal justice field.
Answer: False.
Explanation:
The Roman army was made up of groups of soldiers called legions. Legio: (Legion) consisted of 10 cohorts, about 5,000 min. Eques Legionis: Each legio had a cavalry unit of 120 attached to them.
A Roman soldier was a well-trained fighting machine. ... Roman soldiers weren't always at war - they spent most of their time training for battle. They practiced fighting in formation and man-to-man. Legionaries also patrolled their conquered territories and built roads, forts, and aqueducts (a bridge which carried water).
Explanation:
Satellite image of the Piqiang Fault, a northwest trending left-lateral strike-slip fault in the Taklamakan Desert south of the Tian Shan Mountains, China (40.3°N, 77.7°E)
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In geology, a fault is a planar fracture or discontinuity in a volume of rock across which there has been significant displacement as a result of rock-mass movements. Large faults within the Earth's crust result from the action of plate tectonic forces, with the largest forming the boundaries between the plates, such as subduction zones or transform faults.[1] Energy release associated with rapid movement on active faults is the cause of most earthquakes. Faults may also displace slowly, by aseismic creep.[2]
A fault plane is the plane that represents the fracture surface of a fault. A fault trace or fault line is a place where the fault can be seen or mapped on the surface. A fault trace is also the line commonly plotted on geologic maps to represent a fault.[3][4]
A fault zone is a cluster of parallel faults.[5][6] However, the term is also used for the zone of crushed rock along a single fault.[7] Prolonged motion along closely spaced faults can blur the distinction, as the rock between the faults is converted to fault-bound lenses of rock and then progressively crushed.[8]
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