The best thing that Mary should do in helping Sue is to get her safely home.
<h3>What is the best thing to do?</h3>
This would be taking Sue home and making sure that she is with her parents so she would not do something that she would regret.
Hence, we can see that because Sue is dru-nk/tipsy, she is about to make a bad decision and go home with an older boy and as a good friend, it is Mary's duty to take Sue home or call her parents.
Read more about dru--nkenness here:
brainly.com/question/24274348
#SPJ1
Is that the Lion King song? Or just nonsense?
This varies from how sick they to if they’re even sick at all
Hello! If you think about the word social, it has to do with other people. In the definition above, it states that they learn from other "people." So if you take that into effect plus knowing the definition personally, it explains the exact same thing in that definition. The Social Learning Theory is when people learn from other people which fits the description almost exactly. So this should leave you with your answer!
I hope this helped!
I am, yours most sincerely,
SuperHelperThingy
Answer:
B) physiological
Explanation:
When we feel under pressure, our nervous system instructs the body to release stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol, that produce <u>physiological changes</u> in order to help us cope with the threat or danger we see looming over us. It is what is called "stress response" or "fight or flight" reaction.
When we are stressed, the respiratory system suffers the effect immediately. It usually costs us more to breathe and we do it faster in an attempt to quickly bring oxygen-rich blood to the body.
Cardiovascular effects also occur. When the stress is acute (at that precise moment), the heart rate and blood pressure rise, but return to normal once this has passed. If acute stress is experienced repeatedly or if the stress becomes chronic (if it lasts for a long period of time), it can cause damage to the veins and arteries. <u>This increases the risk of hypertension, heart attacks or heart attacks</u>.