Answer:
Achievement
Explanation:
According to psychology, our behavior is motivated by different things and we all have different motivations for our behaviors. Therefore, two individuals can have the same behavior but be motivated by different factors.
One of the needs is the need for achievement and it refers to the desire to achieve a significant accomplishment and showing high-standards in a task by mastering the skills needed to do this task. In other words, it's the need to accomplish a task that is perceived as difficult.
In this example, Rodrigo enjoys being able to complete a difficult job successfully and accomplishing tasks which require skill and effort. We can see that he feels the need to accomplish a task that are perceived by himself (or others) as difficult by mastering skills. Therefore, we can see that he is motivated by Achievement needs.
answer: Both are scale models
The assumptions are that if you cut taxes and costs for companies, then the company owners and investors will be able to bring about the growth of economy and employ more pepople. The benefits were that the economy entered a peacetiime and people were generally living better. The bad side was that public debt increased by a lot and this would come back to haunt the people later after Reagan was long gone.
Answer: Boycotting basically
shoutout to: @Greenleafable
remain heartless
Banquo is Macbeth’s best friend. Banquo enters the play with Macbeth after both have fought valiantly for Duncan’s side in a recent battle. Duncan acknowledges Banquo as “no less deserved” of praise than Macbeth, but from the beginning of the play Banquo is overshadowed by Macbeth’s accomplishments and ambition. However, Banquo is not entirely without ambition of his own. He asks for a prophecy from the Witches, too, and is pleased to learn that his children will rule Scotland. Similar to Macbeth, Banquo seems unable to understand the cost of the Witches’ prophecy will be his life. In Act III, murderers kill Banquo at Macbeth’s command, and try to kill his young son, Fleance, who manages to get away. Soon after his death, Banquo appears in the form of a ghost at the banquet the Macbeths give at their castle. At play’s end, Banquo’s greatest import remains offstage: his son, Fleance, who could come back to revenge his father’s death and take the throne of Scotland, fulfilling the Witches’ prophecy that Banquo’s sons will one day be king.