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A Glossary of Rhetorical Terms with Examples This glossary came to us from our late colleague Ross Scaife, who encountered it during his graduate studies at the University of Texas. Chris Renaud gave it to him, stating that it originated with Ernest Ament of Wayne State University. Ross, in turn, added some additional examples. Socrates: The fact is, as we said at the beginning of our discussion, that the aspiring speaker needs no knowledge of the truth about what is right or good. In courts of justice no attention is paid whatever to the truth about such topics; all that matters is plausibility. There are even some occasions when both prosecution and defence should positively suppress the facts in favor of probability, if the facts are improbable. Never mind the truth - pursue probability through thick and thin in every kind of speech; the whole secret of the art of speaking lies in consistent adherence to this principle.
Phaedrus: That is what those who claim to be professional teachers of rhetoric actually say, Socrates.Plato, Phaedrus 272. : repetition of the same sound beginning several words in sequence.Let us go forth to lead the land we love. Kennedy, Inaugural.Viri validis cum viribus luctant. Ennius.Veni, vidi, vici.
Julius Caesar: lack of grammatical sequence; a change in the grammatical construction within the same sentence.Agreements entered into when one state of facts exists - are they to be maintained regardless of changing conditions? Diefenbaker: ('doubling back') the rhetorical repetition of one or several words; specifically, repetition of a word that ends one clause at the beginning of the next.Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or state; servants of fame; and servants of business. Francis Bacon.Senatus haec intellegit, consul videt; hic tamen vivit. Immo vero etiam in senatum venit. Cicero, In Catilinam.: the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses or lines.We shall not flag or fail.
We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender.Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas, quod non ego non modo audiam, sed etiam videam planeque sentiam.
Cicero, In Catilinam.Lysias,.Demosthenes,: transposition of normal word order; most often found in Latin in the case of prepositions and the words they control. Anastrophe is a form of hyperbaton.The helmsman steered; the ship moved on; yet never a breeze up blew. Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.Isdem in oppidis, Cicero.Demosthenes,: repetition of the same word or phrase at the end of successive clauses.In 1931, ten years ago, Japan invaded Manchukuo - without warning. In 1935, Italy invaded Ethiopia - without warning. In 1938, Hitler occupied Austria - without warning.
In 1939, Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia - without warning. Later in 1939, Hitler invaded Poland - without warning. And now Japan has attacked Malaya and Thailand - and the United States -without warning.
Roosevelt.Aeschines,: opposition, or contrast of ideas or words in a balanced or parallel construction.Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice, moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue. Barry Goldwater.Brutus: Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more. Shakespeare, Julius Caesar.The vases of the classical period are but the reflection of classical beauty; the vases of the archaic period are beauty itself.' Sir John Beazley.Demosthenes,: expression of doubt (often feigned) by which a speaker appears uncertain as to what he should think, say, or do.Then the steward said within himself, 'What shall I do?' .Demosthenes,: a form of ellipse by which a speaker comes to an abrupt halt, seemingly overcome by passion (fear, excitement, etc.) or modesty.Demosthenes,: a sudden turn from the general audience to address a specific group or person or personified abstraction absent or present.For Brutus, as you know, was Caesar's angel. Judge, O you gods, how dearly Caesar loved him. Shakespeare, Julius Caesar: use of an older or obsolete form.Pipit sate upright in her chair Some distance from where I was sitting; T.
Eliot, 'A Cooking Egg': repetition of the same sound in words close to each other.Thy kingdom come, thy will be done.O fortunatam natam me consule Romam! Cicero, de consulatu: lack of conjunctions between coordinate phrases, clauses, or words.We shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardships, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty. Kennedy, Inaugural.But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. Lincoln, Gettysburg Address.Demosthenes,: a general term for abbreviated or condensed expression, of which asyndeton and zeugma are types.
Ellipse is often used synonymously. The suppressed word or phrase can usually be supplied easily from the surrounding context.Aeolus haec contra: Vergil, Aeneid.Non Cinnae, non Sullae longa dominatio. Tacitus, Annales I.1: harsh joining of sounds.We want no parlay with you and your grisly gang who work your wicked will. Churchill.O Tite tute Tati tibi tanta tyranne tulisti!
Ennius: a harsh metaphor involving the use of a word beyond its strict sphere.I listen vainly, but with thirsty ear. MacArthur, Farewell Address.Cynthia prima suis miserum me cepit ocellis. Propertius I.1.1: two corresponding pairs arranged not in parallels (a-b-a-b) but in inverted order (a-b-b-a); from shape of the Greek letter chi (X).Those gallant men will remain often in my thoughts and in my prayers always. MacArthur.Renown'd for conquest, and in council skill'd. Addison et pacis ornamenta et subsidia belli. Cicero, Pro lege Manilia.Plato,: arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in an order of ascending power.
Often the last emphatic word in one phrase or clause is repeated as the first emphatic word of the next.One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. Tennyson, Ulysses.Nonne hunc in vincula duci, non ad mortem rapi, non summo supplicio mactari imperabis? Cicero, In Catilinam.Facinus est vincere civem Romanum; scelus verberare; prope parricidium necare: quid dicam in crucem tollere? Verbo satis digno tam nefaria res appellari nullo modo potest. Cicero, In Verrem.Demosthenes,: substitution of an agreeable or at least non-offensive expression for one whose plainer meaning might be harsh or unpleasant.When the final news came, there would be a ring at the front door - a wife in this situation finds herself staring at the front door as if she no longer owns it or controls it-and outside the door would be a man.
AP World History - StearnsChapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to the Early CivilizationsI. Human origin – 2.5 million years ago1. 1/4000 of earth’s existence – 24 hour day – last 5 minutesB. Human negatives and positives1. Aggressiveness, long baby time, back problems, death fears2. Grip, high/regular sex drive, omnivores, facial expressions, speechC. Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age – 2.5 million to 12000 BCE1.
Simple tools – increase in size, brain capacity – Homo erectusII. Late Paleolithic. Ancient Egypt, Civilization, Indus Valley Civilization 1067 Words 4 Pages.
Ancient and Classical Civilization Analysis Throughout this course you will be asked to break down cultures and civilizations to a basic level that will allow you to recognize the most important characteristics and easily compare one civilization with another. This method breaks down a civilization or culture into seven components. For the first two chapters, go through the AP World History textbook, The Earth and Its People, and analyze each of the five ancient civilizations. Use the provided. Alexander the Great, Ancient Rome, China 294 Words 3 Pages.
Spodek Guided Notes Chapter 1 A. The Dry Bones Speak I. Human Origins in Myth and History - Paleoanthropology - A student of the earliest humans and the setting in which they lived.
Humans all over the world made stories to explain origin (Before diggers came with interpretations and cussing). O They tell how and why humans came to Earth. Early Myths - Myth – An interpretive story of the past that cannot be verified historically but has a deep moral message. Caste – Social, economic. Australopithecus, Chimpanzee, Hominidae 696 Words 4 Pages.
Name Reading Questions Ways of the World Textbook Chapters 1-3 Bullet-point your answers. Write responses in color; keep NO SPACING, 11 font. When completed, send to my work email: [email protected] Chapter 1 1) Using the map on pages 14-15, list the sequence of human migration across the planet. 2) On page 19, how did the Austronesian migrations differ from other early patterns of human movement? Include the two major developments that followed.
3) From pages. Agriculture, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Near East 496 Words 3 Pages.
World Civilizations - The Global Experience Fifth Edition AP Textbook Chapter 10: A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe In Depth Introduction Post Classical Period Fall of the Roman Empire Known as the Middle Ages Gradual recovery from the shock of the Roman Empire’s collapse Growing interaction with other societies (Mediterranean mostly) Forms of civilization Northward covering Western Europe Spread of new religious beliefs Christian missionaries converted people of polytheistic. Byzantine Empire, Charlemagne, Franks 617 Words 4 Pages. Chapter 1 Part 1 Early Man. Most of the 2 million plus years of mans existence has been associated with the Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age. This period had both Homo erectus and Homo sapiens sapiens and lasted until 14,000 years ago. HE disappeared about 40,000 years ago.
HSS are our direct descendants. Hunter/Gatherer and Late Paleolithic Developments. HG economies dominated human history until 9000 BCE and help propel migration over most of the lands of the earth.
Ancient Egypt, Civilization, Egypt 1143 Words 4 Pages. Societies that were present by 15th century – hunters and gatherers, villages of agricultural peoples, newly emerging chiefdoms or small sates, nomadic/pastoral communities, established civilizations and empires. Paleolithic Persistence: Australia and North America Paleolithic=Old Stone Age peoples Australia, Siberia, the arctic coastlands, parts of Africa, and the Americas were all Paleolithic peoples Australia had 250 or so separated groups in it Despite the absence of agriculture, Australia’s. Africa, Beijing, China 975 Words 3 Pages. AP World History Notes Ch 6 Early Americas & Oceania August 4, 2004 The cultures of the Americas and Oceania developed in relative isolation to the other early complex societies.
Nevertheless, they too developed an agricultural base sufficient to support growing populations, specialized labor, political institutions, diverse societies, and long-distance trading networks. Less is known of these cultures than those in other parts of the world primarily because either writing systems did not develop. Agriculture, Civilization, Maya civilization 1202 Words 4 Pages.
Ch 1: Introducing Government in America. Many young ppl apathetic about politics, less involved than elderly. Need to be involved for political tolerance, identify what policies they benefit from. Politics compete with TV and the internet Government. Government: institutions + processes through which public policies are made for a society (Congress, president, the courts, federal administrative agencies). 500,000 elected officials in US.
How should we govern. Democracy, Government, Majority 1214 Words 5 Pages. AP World: Chapter 12 I. Reunification and Renissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties Though it was not the biggest city, Hangzhou, the capital of the song rulers, was renowned for its beauty and sophistication a) Rebuilding the Imperial Edifice in the Sui-Tang Era The emergence of the Sui dynasty at the end of the 6th century C.E.
Signaled a return to strong dynastic control in China. In the Tang era that followed, a Confucian revival enhanced the position of.
China, Chinese literature, Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period 1644 Words 6 Pages. AP WORLD HISTORY Chapter Processing Work INTRODUCTION Historical Thinking Skill Exercise: Periodization: Compare the author’s periodization in Parts One through Six to the Colleges Board’s historical periodization. How do the author’s dates and titles compare to the College Board’s? What explains the similarities and the differences?
Why do you suppose the periodization in world history can be so controversial? UNIT 1 CHAPTER 1: Historical Thinking Skill Exercise: Historical Argumentation. Age of Discovery, Bankruptcy in the United States, Early modern Europe 1306 Words 5 Pages. World History AP withMr.
Derrick-Learning Targets Part2- The Classical Era in World History, 500B.C.E. Chapter6- Classical Era Variations: Africa and the Americas500B.C.E.–1200C.E. Learning Targets ★ Analyze classical civilizations thatevolvedoutsideof themorewell-known civilizations of Eurasia ★ Comparethedevelopmentof civilizationsinAfrica and the Americas ★ Examinethefactorsthatmakecivilizationsdevelop andanalyzewhytheydevelop differentlyin someregions ★ Distinguishthecharacteristics. Africa, Americas, Ancient Pueblo Peoples 1170 Words 6 Pages. 1) The Shapes of Human Communities 1. In 1500, the world had all different societies, gatherers and hunters to empires, but it was different 2.
Paleolithic Persistence a) gathering and hunting societies (Paleolithic peoples) still existed throughout the world but they had changed over time b) b. Had new & improved technologies and ideas, e.g., outrigger canoes, fish hooks, etc (had not adopted agriculture) c) exchanged goods over hundreds of miles and developed. 2nd millennium, Europe, Iran 1149 Words 4 Pages.
AP World History Course Requirements 2013-2014 Ms. Binn ([email protected]) Phone #: 447-1575 ext 5135 Link to Course Standards:. I. Course Requirements: 1.
NOTEBOOK: Students will have to keep a class notebook. The notebook will be for notes/handouts/assignments/ and VOCABULARY (unless you have a separate notebook for vocabulary).
Notebook MUST be a three ring binder-so papers can be added where necessary. Advanced Placement, Harlan Hanson, Homework 1674 Words 6 Pages. AP WORLD HISTORY QUESTIONS FOR ANALYSIS PAGE 10 1. The Mesopotamian view of the afterlife was a place known as the land of no return.
It was completely filled with darkness and the people there see no light. It is the house from which none who enters ever returns. Anyone who held a high name in the mortal world will serve the gods.
The core message of Siduri's advice is to live life happy and to the fullest. Utnapishtim's initial response is that man was never created to be immortal. Akkadian language, Babylon, Babylonia 1545 Words 4 Pages. Chapter 3: First Civilizations: Cities, States, & Unequal Societies (3500 b.c.e.–500 b.c.e.) Chapter Learning Objectives. To establish the relationship between the First Civilizations and the Agricultural Revolution. To contrast civilizations with other forms of human communities.
To explore when, where, and how the First Civilizations arose in human history. To explore how the emergence of civilizations transformed how humans lived and how their societies were structured. To show the. Ancient Egypt, Ancient history, Ancient Near East 1096 Words 2 Pages. Traditional institutions of the Roman state.
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Caesar’s grandnephew, Augustus Caesar sized power after Julius assassination, and established the basic structures of the Roman Empire. Marcus Aurelius brought peace and prosperity to the Mediterranean world.
Government became less effective, strong later emperor, Diocletian and Constantine attempted to reverse the tide. Constantine adopted Christianity. The decline of the city states ushered in the Macedonian conquest and the formation of a wider Hellenistic. Alexander the Great, Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome 1001 Words 3 Pages. Identifications 1. Paleolithic: The period of time also known as the Old Stone Age, which lasted until about 10,000 years ago.
Neolithic: The period of time also known as the New Stone Age. It is associated with the origins of agriculture. Foragers: Hunting and food-gathering people who ate wild vegetables, meat, wild edible plants, and insects to survive 4.
Agricultural Revolutions: A series of separate transformations that occurred when agriculture arose independently in many. Agriculture, Ancient Near East, Civilization 816 Words 3 Pages.
Farming along Nile River. 4,000 BCE: Sumerians settle in Tigris- Euphrates valley. 4,000 BCE: Sumerians (a people who had migrated into the area from the north) provided final boost toward establishing civilization. 4,000 BCE: cumulative effects of agriculture & technology → civilization as a new organizational form (wheel, bronze use, and writing facilitated). 3,500 BCE: Writing is introduced. (based on new needs for commercial property and political records → celebration of the deeds of. Agriculture, Akkadian language, Ancient Egypt 970 Words 4 Pages.
World History Guided Reading 1 'The Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations” TERMS: Culture - Socially transmitted patterns of action and expression Foragers - Hunting and food gathering people Animal domestication - The killing of animals for food Pastorialism - Way of life dependent on large herds of grazing livestock Matrilineal - Kinship with mother Patrilineal - Kinship with father Lineages - the holding of land by large kinship (blood relationship). Ancient Egypt, Bronze Age, Fertile Crescent 1567 Words 7 Pages. Chapter 1: Introduction to Human Geography. Fieldwork- go out in the field and see what people are doing, observe how people’s actions and reactions vary across space. Summary of Field Note: Kenya full of fertile farmland but many are hungry. Why don’t they grow food for themselves?
Most of Kenya is owned by foreigners and Kenya needs the foreign revenue. Human geography- how people make places, how we organize space and society, how we interact with each other in places and across. Anthropology, Cartography, Cultural region 1502 Words 5 Pages. AP World Chapter Rome Notes Rome is one of the longest lasting and most influential empires.
It was the center of comm. And trade for the entire Italian peninsula. At its greatest extent in second century C.E., the Roman Empire ruled between 70 and 100 million diverse people. Spread 2700 miles east and 2500 north to south. At its most powerful (27 BCE - 180 CE) the Pax Romana, the Roman peace, was enforced. From Hill Town to Empire: Rome founded in 753 BCE. For two and a half centuries Rome.
Ancient Rome, Augustus, Julius Caesar 1766 Words 5 Pages. 20: The Muslim Empires Introduction -Nomadic invasions wasted much of the Muslim world w/ the sacking of Baghdad in 1258. 3 new Muslim dynasties emerged after the nomadic invasions -New flowering of Islamic civilization; Competition(political divisions+military incursions -Largest-Ottoman from N Africa to S Russia; Safavid dynasty to the E; Mughals in Delhi region of Ganges plain -3 empires combined=largest Islamic political+military power ever -All 3 depended on firearms-“gunpowder. Byzantine Empire, Egypt, Iraq 700 Words 3 Pages.
Expansion & Integration - All classical civilizations expanded - New challenges: How did they cooperate? ○ Seminal thinkers brought central values; Confucius, Laozi, Buddha, Socrates - Unity attempts ○ China= Centralize the government § Royal citizens - resettlement around the government § Language promotion § Confucian hierarchy § India= Hierarchy society § Caste system § Hinduism ○ Mediterranean § Local autonomy (freedom in life for their people. Byzantine Empire, Central Asia, Decline of the Roman Empire 362 Words 3 Pages. Strayer AP Practice Essay Prompts Chapter 1 and 2 1. Analyze the continuities and changes that resulted from the spread of agriculture beginning around 10,000 years ago to 5000 years ago. Compare the interaction between humans and the environment between two of the following types of societies between 3000 B.C.E. Hunter-gather b.
Agricultural c. Pastoral Chapter 3 1. Analyze the continuities and changes in social and economic life that emerged as a result of the formation of city-states. Asia, Central Asia, Iran 1131 Words 7 Pages.
2014-2015 Tentative Semester 1 AP US History Reading Guide Scheduled Reading Sources: Newman, John J., and John M. United States History: Preparing for the Advanced Placement Examination. Des Moines: Amsco, 2015. Tindall, George, and David Shi. America: A Narrative History.
New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company, 2013. Zinn, Howard. A People's History of the United States. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. Unit One Unit One Essential Questions 1. What role does the environment.
Abraham Lincoln, American Civil War, Articles of Confederation 837 Words 5 Pages. Chapter 1- Introduction: the scope of medical anthropology - Medical anthro:. How people in diff cultures explain the causes of ill health, types of treatment they believe in and whom they turn to when ill - Anthropology. “The study of man” (several branches) 1) Physical Anthropology. Human biology. Study of evolution of humans. Concerned with explaining the causes of present diversity of human populations 1) Material Anthropology.
Deals with art and artifacts of humankind. Anthropology, Cultural anthropology, Cultural studies 547 Words 3 Pages. Chapter 7 India Monday, October 15, 2012 12:21 PM Indian Subcontinent. 3 topographical zones: - Northern mountainous zone - Indus and Ganges basins - Peninsula Vindhya Mountains and Deccan plateau divide peninsula from other two zones 4 sub regions in Peninsula: - Tropical Kerala in west - Coromandel Coast in east - Flat area of Tamil Nadu in south - Island of Sri Lanka Weather, Crops, and Geography.
Peninsular India and Ganges Valley have a subtropical climate. Buddhism, Hinduism, History of India 706 Words 4 Pages.
Chapter 30 The Gorbachev Era Gorbachev became the new leader of the Soviet Union. Perestroika meant only a reordering of economic policy.
The most important instruments was glasnost. Soviet citizens and officials were encouraged to discuss openly the strengths and weaknesses of the Soviet Union. Previously banned works were now published, and music based on western styles began to be performed openly. Gorbachev called for the creation of a new Soviet parliament. Legalized the formation of other. Boris Yeltsin, Cold War, Developing country 1684 Words 5 Pages.
Chapter 16 After the collapse of the Guptas in the 5th century, there is no reunification until the 16th century There is no central, imperial authority Politics and Kingdoms of North India Harsha (reigned 606-648), a scholarly Buddhist emperor temporarily reunites northern Indian in the 7th century Umayyad forces capture Sind in NW India (711), later Sing passes to Abbasid control Mahmud of Ghanzi from Afghanistan plunders North India 17 times from 1001-1024 -His plunders hastens decline. Hinduism, Holy Roman Empire, India 674 Words 3 Pages. World History Notes: Chapter One Intro In 1849, William Loftus founded the ruins of the city of Uruk, one of the first cities in the world. Loftus found this ancient city in a part of Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia was one of the first places where civilization began. The First Humans The first civilizations began in Western Asia and Egypt.
The way we determine how civilization came about is through science. Archaeologists find many signs of civilization in ancient ruins. No records were contained.
Ancient Egypt, Ancient Near East, Assyria 2263 Words 6 Pages. Notes from Stearns’ text book World Civilization 1: 1 The Neolithic Revolution (10-13).
Farming initially developed in the Middle East, the Fertile Crescent. Grains such as barley and wild wheat were abundant. Also, not heavily forested, and animals were in short supply, presenting a challenge to hunters. 10,000 BCE to 8,000 BCE. Notice: it took thousands of years for this “revolution” so not fast but profound for history. Agriculture was hard for many hunting and gathering peoples to.
Ancient Egypt, Ancient Near East, Egypt 894 Words 4 Pages. Chapter 1. Public Speaking is a way of making yoru idea spublic of sharing them with other people and of influencing other people. Public speaking is a vital means of civic engagement. It is a way to express your ideas and to have an impact on issues that matter in society- form of empowerment can make difference in things people care about. Key phrase make a difference Tradition of Public Speaking. Orator someone who has special skills in public speaking.
Oldest known. Communication, Ethics, Language 801 Words 4 Pages. Mikaela Duguil Period: 6 Chapter 1 Cornell notes 1. What was not an important goal of the early English explorers and colonists? It was not an important goal to build a new nation.
Discuss the factors that transformed the colonist and caused them to envision and creating an independent nation: common bonds, language, farmers, untouched by tyranny of royal authority, official religion and social hierarchy, individual freedom, and willingness to subjugate to others. 1 1105 Words 4 Pages. The Beginnings of Civilization PREHISTORY. Absence of written records. Scientists rely on unwritten evidence Archaeologists-study places where prehistoric people lived Artifacts-objects shaped by human beings Fossils-human or animal bones and teeth Fossilized traces left in rocks by plants and animals Geologists- analyze fossils and the rocks in which they are found Chemists and Physicists-determines the age of the artifacts and other remains of the past THE SEARCH FOR KNOWLEDGE. Ancient Near East, Mesolithic, Neolithic 749 Words 22 Pages. Chapter 1 Notes First step: Tell the truth about who you are and what you want, it’s an important key to becoming a master student.
The ways we express our “first steps” are more powerful when they are specific. The truth has power! The discovery wheel exercise will show you a picture of how you see your own strengths and weaknesses as a student today. After completing the exercise for myself I found that I rated all skills fairly even. Discovering how you learn: Discovering new options.
Auditory learning, Education, Educational psychology 1153 Words 5 Pages. During my study in the World Civilizations class, it occurred to me that although many ancient civilizations established far apart and independent from each other, yet somehow we can trace tremendous evidences showing us that their cultures, beliefs, world views, traditions are somewhat similar to one another. I am very interested in discover more details about when those ancient civilizations was formed, the people at that time did not have effective transportations or contact methods like us today. Ancient history, China, Chinese mythology 2225 Words 6 Pages. Donnie Millang Psych August 30, 2012 Chapter 1- The Science of Psychology What it means to be a psychologist Overview: 1.
What is psychology 2. The growth of psychology as a science 3.
Major trends in the development of psychology What is Psychology? -Psychology: the scientific study of the causes of behavior A. Why is behavior studied a. To understand human behavior b.
To explain why people do what they do.If behavior has laws we can study and control those. Behavior, Behaviorism, Clinical psychology 1774 Words 7 Pages. Chapter 1 The Humanities: An Introduction Objectives After studying this chapter, students should be able to Explain the role of the humanities in establishing values. Explain the fundamental differences between the humanities and the sciences. Have a beginning understanding of how to respond to a work of art.
Understand the concepts of abstract ideas and concrete images. Understand structure and artistic form. Outline of Chapter A. The Humanities: A Study of Values. Aesthetics, Art, Arts 1419 Words 7 Pages. Tevan Luong AP World History: Summer Assignment Chapter 1 1. Geography and climate play a major role in the development of early human societies, for instance, Middle Eastern grains did not grow at all in the humidity of equatorial West Africa.
Rather than cultivating grains, the geography and climate limitations made it more suitable to grow rice, pearl millet, and sorghum in West Africa. The barriers that the environment set led to the diversity of human culture and diets based on the condition. Ancient Egypt, Civilization, Civilizations 881 Words 3 Pages. AP® WORLD HISTORY 2007 SCORING GUIDELINES Question 2—Continuity/Change Over Time BASIC CORE (competence) 0–7 Points 1. Has acceptable thesis.
1 Point. The thesis correctly specifies both change and continuity in the formation of national identity in the region of the Middle East, Southeast Asia, OR Sub-Saharan Africa from 1914 to the present. The thesis must be explicitly stated in the introduction or the conclusion of the essay. The thesis may appear as one sentence or as multiple.
Africa, All rights reserved, Ethiopia 1129 Words 5 Pages. AP World First Semester Review 1.
The Paleolithic Age, or Old Stone Age—ending in 12,000 BCE—refers to the period of time typified by use of crude stone tools and hunting and gathering for subsistence. Neanderthals, a species of the genus Homo, disappeared at the end of the Paleolithic period whereas Homo sapiens, a humanoid species, emerged as mot successful at the end of the Paleolithic period. The characteristics of the human spices in the Paleolithic Ageincluded slow population growth, rituals. Abbasid Caliphate, Hinduism, Islam 1397 Words 5 Pages.
AP World: Notes on the Early Modern World Who’s driving? Silver was a newly traded and highly valued item the world had not yet seen in depth. The Spanish and the Dutch had most of the silver, but because during this time period it was considered the accepted medium for trade goods, nearly all the silver ended up in China. Spain was dominant over Mexico and Peru so it naturally had much silver that put them in a role of power. Japan also claimed a hand in the silver market. Africa, African slave trade, Atlantic slave trade 956 Words 3 Pages.
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Chapter 1- Childhood in crisis Palmer (2006) “battery reared rather than free range” Cited in The Open University, 2013, E212, chapter 1, pg8) Palmer suggests that changes in technology over the last quarter of a century have had a major impact on modern life. Children associate happiness with “stuff” purchased as part of the consumer culture of the minority world Thus putting more pressure on parents and children and “contaminating children’s experience of childhood” (pg8) Furedi (2001) believes. Child, Childhood, Family 1327 Words 3 Pages.
MODERN HISTORY STUDY NOTES NATIONAL STUDIES Germany 1918-1939 WEIMAR REPUBLIC: Revolution and The Birth of the Weimar Republic Emergence of the Democratic Republic and the Impact of the Treaty of Versailles THE GERMAN HIGH COMMAND - Prior to World War II, Germany had a parliamentary system with two houses, but it was not a democracy. Only the lower house (The Reichstag) was elected by all German males over 25 years of age.
The upper house (The Bundesrat) was appointed by the Kaiser. The Kaiser. Adolf Hitler, Democracy, German Empire 848 Words 6 Pages. Jonathon Martin Period 1 Chapter 8 Questions 1. Long-distance commerce acted as a motor of change in pre-modern world history by altering consumption and daily life. Essential food and useful tools such as salt were traded from the Sahara desert all the way to West Africa and salt was used as a food preserver.
Some incenses essential to religious ceremonies were traded across the world because there was a huge demand for them. Trade diminished economic self-sufficiency by creating a reliance on. Asia, Buddhism, Central Asia 2283 Words 4 Pages. A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe Introduction The postclassical period in the West is referred to as the Middle Ages. After recovering from the fall of Rome's ancient empire, civilization gradually spread beyond the Mediterranean to the rest of western Europe.
Most of the West was converted to Christianity. During the Middle Ages, Europe began to establish stronger ties with other Eurasian civilizations and with Africa.
As a result of these connections, Europe learned new technologies. Early Middle Ages, Europe, Feudalism 2198 Words 7 Pages. 5 essential characteristics of all living cells: 1. Bounded by a lipid rich plasma membrane 2.
Contain nucleic acid that encodes at least one complete copy of a genome a. Originally RNA these days, exclusively DNA b. All cells replicate DNA by template directed polymerization into an intermediate form RNA 3. Capable of regulated metabolic activity a.
Through macromolecular catalysis 4. Capable of protein synthesis a. The machinery of protein synthesis is conserved among all cells (MOSTLY RNA). Bacteria, Cell, Cell nucleus 406 Words 3 Pages.
Ancient Empires Study Guide 1. What is civilization and why is that definition important to historians? Civilization is the advanced state of human society in which a high level of culture, science, industry, and government has been reached. This definition is important to historians because their job is too research the past – culture, science, industry, government, etc. and decipher the mistakes and success made in ancient times in order to shape a better future.
This definition is also. Alexander the Great, Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome 1859 Words 6 Pages. Chapter 1 – STRATEGIC HRM. Hrm – involves the productive use of people in achieving the organisation’s strategic objectives and the satisfaction of individual employee needs. Objectives – Measurable targets to be achieved within a certain time frame. Maximise human capital – focus on selecting, developing and rewarding top talent, encouraging open communication, team work and collaboration; and refusing to tolerate poor performance.
Job design, employee participation. Employment, Human resource management, Human resources 1188 Words 6 Pages. To encourage the worse off peasants to attack them. Stalin focused on industry and strengthening his nation while food and consumer goods were scarce THE DEPRESSION Political.
Nationalists everywhere called for independence from the world economy. Many people in capitalist countries began calling for government intervention in the economy. Although the American, British, and French governments intervened in their economies, they remained democratic. as economic grievances. Adolf Hitler, Communism, Communist state 1396 Words 6 Pages. AP WH Unit 3 AN AGE OF ACCELERATING CONNECTIONS 500–1500 The Worlds of European Christendom Connected and Divided, 500–1300 Chapter Learning Objectives. To examine European society after the breakup of the Roman Empire.
To compare the diverse legacies of Rome in Western Europe and the Byzantine Empire. To explore medieval European expansion. To present the backwardness of medieval Europe relative to other civilizations, and the steps by which it caught up Key Terms Aristotle. Byzantine Empire, Christendom, Constantinople 1212 Words 3 Pages. AP Biology, Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration and Fermentation Life is Work 9.1 Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing organic fuels Intro Catabolic Pathways and Production of ATP 1. Distinguish fermentation and cellular respiration. Fermentation Partial degradation of glucose Uses no O2 Yields some ATP Cellular respiration Complete degradation to CO2 and H2O Requires O2 = aerobic Yields much more ATP 2.
Describe the summary equation for. Adenosine triphosphate, Cellular respiration, Citric acid cycle 1336 Words 7 Pages. Grammar inventory to become more aware of your skills to convey and better and clear message Keep a list of errors and refer to these errors when proofreading Example; A teacher informs you that you aren’t using comma and have run on sentences. Make a note of your errors Always read your work out loud Get a friend to read it to you out loud Always use spell check Find your weak spots and study more on them Check masculine vs feminine (bobby vs bobbie).
Cheque, Communication, Copy editing 579 Words 3 Pages. Negative feedback systems regulate body temperature.
Include the role of sensors, effectors, input, output, integrating center, set point, error signal, and regulated variables. Guided Student Activities Organization of the Body, 1.1 page 2 1. Physiology is the study of what? The study of the functions of organisms comes in many forms-plant physiology, cell physiology, microbial physiology, and animal physiology, to name a few. Human physiology focuses on how the human body works. Bone, Connective tissue, Epithelium 1237 Words 5 Pages.
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