As a research participant, you study this list of words: curtain, book, anger, dirt, plant, hunger, paper, sadness, sunshine, mu
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The doctor said I would have a hard time remembering the sequence
Before WWII Japan had a <em>Oligarchy government</em>, kind of a military dictatorship; and when the U.S. occupied Japan after the war, political institutions were took apart through the <em>SCAP</em> policy (<em>a set of standards for security policies</em>) transitioning from Oligarchy to Democracy, they tried to get rid of their imperial system, but there was not a complete agreement on that, so only the position of Imperialism was replaced with democracy.
Answer:
d. There are allocation trade-offs between fecundity and other traits.
Explanation:
for lower-than-expected fecundity , despite increased fitness is plausible because there are allocation fecundity and other traits.
Fecundity is nothing but the ability of an organism to produce and abundance of off-spring. It is same as fertility. Fecundity also depends upon size of the organism. This is called allocation fecundity.
Hence, option d is correct.
Answer:
b. signed by both parties
Explanation:
The Uniform Commercial Codes includes the law of frauds. This is a state law which generally requires a certain contracts that is in writing and is signed by one of the parties to be enforceable.
It states that a sales agreement which is of $500 or more than that must be evidenced in a written form. The Uniform Commercial Codes confirmation memorandum of merchants allows that two parties or merchants having an oral agreement is bound to have a memo or a letter which is signed by only one party and which stands without objection for at least ten days.
Hence, confirmation memorandum signing by both the two parties is not requirement in UCC.
Thus the correct option is (b).
Answer:
Explanation:
In
the
1630s,
the
Tokugawa
shogunate
took
a
series
of
steps
to
further
restrict
Japan’s
international
contacts.
By
1639,
the
Dutch
were
the
only
Europeans
permitted
to
come
to
Japan,
and
the
conditions
under
which
they
were
allowed to trade and interact with Japanese were extremely circumscribed by the Tokugawa authorities. The
following
edict
of
1635
was
issued
by
the
shogunate
to
the
officials
administering
the
busy
port
of
Nagasaki,
the
site
of
most
of
Japan’s
foreign
contacts
at
the
time.