3. “Mouth of Hell.”
Explaination:
“Mouth” referring to an agressive bite of a monster. “Hell” referring to how that is commonly where monsters and demons come from.
Protective because you are protective yourself from receiving a cold.
Answer:
To study the processes by which past behaviour influences future behaviour, participants were led to believe that without being aware of it, they had expressed either support for or opposition to the institution of comprehensive exams. Judgment and response time data suggested that participants’ perceptions of their past behaviour often influenced their decisions to repeat the behaviour. This influence was partly the result of cognitive activity that influenced participants’ cognitions about specific behavioural consequences and the attitude they based on these cognitions. More generally, however, feedback about past behaviour had a direct effect on participants’ attitudes and ultimate behavioural decisions that were independent of the outcome-specific cognitions. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for biased scanning of memory, dissonance reduction, self-perception, and the use of behaviour as a heuristic.
Answer:
I am too and I want to go to England or anywhere in Europe
Explanation:
Explanation:
<u>program counter:</u>
- it is also known as instruction pointer.
- it has the address of the instruction that is being executed at that time.
- it is a 32-bit register .
<u>instruction register:</u>
- it keeps the instruction that is being executed at that time.
- it holds active memory that is currently executed
<u>execute process:</u>
it is based on 3 cycles:
- fetch
- decode
- execute
fetch:
it takes the instruction from program counter(has memory address)
decode:
the instruction that is fetched is decoded/interpreted by the decoder.
execute:
The result generated by the operation is stored in the main memory or sent to an output device