Answer:
Every incident report you file should contain a minimum of the following:
Type of incident (injury, near miss, property damage, or theft)
Address
Date of incident
Time of incident
Name of affected individual
A narrative description of the incident, including the sequence of events and results of the incident
Injuries, if any
Treatments required, if any
Witness name(s)
Witness statements
Other workers involved
Video and/or 360-degree photographs of the scene
The answer I would chose would be ok
Hey there!
A comma is used to indicate a breif stop in the beginning of a sentence, usually to provide drama or emphasis on certain parts of the sentence. For example:
My favorite foods are apples, (stop), oranges, (stop), and pears(stop).
Let's start from D. We'll write it with stops and determine whether it makes sense by reading it aloud:
"In the beginning(stop) of this process we had more patience for each other.
This is incorrect, as you should not stop after saying "in the beginning".
For C:
"The party will(stop) not go forward (stop) unless we can come to an agreement."
This too is incorrect. Stopping after "the party will", and again after "not go forward", doesn't sound grammatically correct<em>.
</em>
For B:
"We have made many decisions (stop) we need to make a few more."
Reading this aloud, we notice an immediate mistake. Stopping after decisions doesn't make any sense, and in order to illustrate that intended "and we need to make a few more", a semicolon (;) would make more sense.
For A:
"Until the next meeting(Stop), we should focus on selecting music."
This one is grammatically correct. It correctly demonstrates a stop after the word meeting, just like used in regular oral and sentence speaking.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Andrew met his roommate Danny when they both joined the Independent Filmmakers Club as freshmen, and they have a large group of mutual friends through that group. More recently, Danny has joined a fraternity and has been inviting Andrew to join him at the frat's parties and other events. Andrew has accepted a few invitations but feels awkward at the fraternity events because he just doesn't identify with the other people who attend. We would describe the filmmakers' club as Andrew's <u>ingroup</u> and the fraternity as an <u>outgroup</u>.
Explanation: an ingroup is a social group to which a person psychologically identifies as being a member. By contrast, an outgroup is a social group with which an individual does not identify.