Answer: possible self
Explanation: possible self is simply defined as presently having an ideal or recognition of what we what to be in the future and most times we have plan and arrange it all in our head( cognitive memory). Possible self entails the aspect of ourself we really wish or preferred it comes to pass(preferred self), the aspect of our self we are undecided about and yet to picture it clearly
(reluctant self)and the last is the aspect of our life that we are greatly afraid of and which it does not come to pass(feared self)
It is like having a preview of the your future (ideal self). A person may in the present say in 10 years time, he must have been married with 3 kids and working Ina large construction firm. This example above is called possible self.
Answer:
B. refuse to vote on ratifying the Constitution.
Explanation:
Federalists wanted a strong executive branch and government while the anti-federalists wanted a weaker central government.
Anti federalists were loose political coalition of politicians who opposed the strong central government that the US constitution of 1787 created. Their efforts led to the addition of Bill of Rights to the US constitution.
They were afraid of the authority of single, strong national government, as it could easily encroach upon the rights of the individuals and the states. So they wanted a Bill of Rights to be added to the constitution to safeguard the people from the Strong central government.
Anti federalists were strong in New York, Massachusetts and Virginia. James Winthrop of Massachusetts, George Mason and Patrick Henry of Virginia were some of the famous anti federalists.
The answer is D because the long march was a huge factor in world war 2
Answer:
C) Mr. Baumer would still try to get back at Slade.
Explanation:
In the short story "Bargain" written by A.B. Guthrie, Jr, the plot revolves especially around the enmity o a shopkeeper Mr. Baumer and a drunk penny cheater Slade. The story tells of how Slade gets his due after all the trouble he had caused Mr. Baumer.
Slade had been acquiring unpaid bills for the goods he took from Mr. Baumer's shop. And he had no intention of paying for them. Every time he was approached with the bill, he'd torture and beat the tiny shopkeeper. One instant shows him beaten so badly that he had to give up the use of his arm for a long time, even hiring a new helper for the shop.
The fight scene where Al, the helper of the store, talks about is where Mr. Baumer had been badly beaten up. Al reveals that even after the heavy beating Mr. Baumer had just got, he did not seem to give up on the idea of making Slade pay for whatever he had owed, if not in cash, but kind. This statement of Al that Baumer <em>"didn’t look beaten even"</em> reveals that he will still try to get back at him.