What are the facilities and physical assets of traditional economic capital?
A. people and goods
B. hunt and gather
C. trade and profit
D. equipment and technology
Ans: D
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Emilio saw a wonderful all-in-one kitchen appliance for sale on TV
The appliance would allow him to get rid of six small appliances and leave more room in his kitchen. Emilio called the number and agreed to purchase the product. He then found out that the price only covered the product base and he would have to purchase each appliance add-on individually. When he did this, the product cost significantly more than he originally thought. This is known as the A) foot-in-the-door technique. B) door-in-the-face technique. C) low-ball technique. D) bait-and-switch technique.
Erikson believed that because of the pressures related to the identity-versus-identity-confusion stage, many adolescents
a) never have the opportunity to fully experience adolescence before they mature and move on to young adulthood. b) become psychologically scarred for life and never fully mature. c) pursue a "psychological moratorium" during which they take time off from upcoming responsibilities of adulthood to explore alternative roles and possibilities. d) regress psychologically to an earlier time in their lives or childhood where life was simpler.
After repeated sexual contacts with random individuals over a period of time, Skye believes that he has contracted HIV. He does not want to visit a clinic for the test for the fear of being exposed. He also has a fear of needles and avoids getting any kind of blood test that may involve pricking to collect blood samples. In this case, which of the following methods of testing works best for Skye?
A. the antibody screening test B. the OraQuick In-Home HIV Test C. the qualitative hCG Blood Test D. the Home Access HIV-1 Test System
A cognitive psychologist was interviewed by a television health reporter. During the interview, the psychologist used the term abstinence-violation effect
When the interviewer asked the psychologist for a definition, the psychologist described it as a) a patient's tendency to lie about concealed drinking. b) the fact that drinking in public is illegal in some states. c) a patient's belief that he or she is being controlled by the therapist. d) the pattern of falling back to chronic drinking if one slips up even a little.