theory of the firm Crossword Puzzles
Psychology People 2020-05-11
Across
- investigated different types of attachment, insecure
- Demonstrated that memory is not accurate as we believe
- one of the first psychologist to develop functionalism
- proposed the five stages of grief
- French Psychologist who created first intelligence test
- neo-freudian who dealt with inferiority complex
- Neo-Freudian who explored the collective unconscious
- Russian Psychologist investigated classical conditioning with dogs
- Known for work with Rhesus Monkeys on attachment
- moral development in females rivaled Kohlberg
- created law that identified the just noticeable difference
- American mental health reformer
- Created operant chamber that bears his name
- discovered area of brain known for speaking
- Created the hierarchy of needs
- work with split brain patients
Down
- Known for the Bobo Doll experiment
- first laboratory in Leipzig, Germany
- believed people are born with Language Acquisition Device
- First woman to earn a PhD in psychology
- humanist who developed Unconditional positive regard
- psychoanalytic school of thought, latent and manifest content
- concept of learned helplessness in animals and depression
- Multiple intelligence theory
- developed the three stages of morality, preconventional. ..
- psychosocial stage theory of development
- British naturalist known for theory of evolution
- noted for his work in forgetting curve
28 Clues: Multiple intelligence theory • Created the hierarchy of needs • work with split brain patients • American mental health reformer • Known for the Bobo Doll experiment • proposed the five stages of grief • first laboratory in Leipzig, Germany • noted for his work in forgetting curve • First woman to earn a PhD in psychology • psychosocial stage theory of development • ...
Types of Intelligence 2022-01-11
Across
- ? Intelligence, Involves the ability to successfully express, understand, perceive emotions
- ? Intelligence,Ability to be insightful and creative
- Unique to each different type of task
- Common to all tasks requiring intelligence
- Capacity that is require to solve problems, the ability to this flexibly and to reason well
- ? Intelligence, Involves established cognitive functions related to achievement, influenced by accumulated knowledge
- Sub theory of Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, an idea that describes the mental processes in intelligent thought: Meta-components, knowledge acquisition components, and performance components
Down
- ? Intelligence, 'street smarts'
- Sub theory of Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, the idea that intelligence is differently defined depending on the culture
- Sub theory of Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, the idea that intelligence involves the ability to successfully deal with new situations, and the ability to handle familiar tasks with not much effort
- ? Intelligence, Thinking analytically and able to reason abstractly
11 Clues: ? Intelligence, 'street smarts' • Unique to each different type of task • Common to all tasks requiring intelligence • ? Intelligence,Ability to be insightful and creative • ? Intelligence, Thinking analytically and able to reason abstractly • ? Intelligence, Involves the ability to successfully express, understand, perceive emotions • ...
30 2024-08-23
Across
- Set theory founder
- Cartesian coordinate system
- Probability and celestial mechanics
- Famous for his triangle
- Early female mathematician
- Indian mathematical genius
- Independently developed calculus
- Father of geometry
- Proposed 23 problems
- Famous family of mathematicians
- Founded group theory
- Father of computer science
- Sequence named after Italian mathematician
- Famous theorem on triangles
Down
- Series and transforms
- Prince of mathematicians
- Swiss mathematician
- Hypothesis on prime numbers
- Last theorem
- Ancient Greek mathematician
- Fractals pioneer
- Game theory developer
- Developed calculus
- Algebra innovator
- Contributions to mechanics
25 Clues: Last theorem • Fractals pioneer • Algebra innovator • Set theory founder • Developed calculus • Father of geometry • Swiss mathematician • Proposed 23 problems • Founded group theory • Series and transforms • Game theory developer • Famous for his triangle • Prince of mathematicians • Early female mathematician • Indian mathematical genius • Contributions to mechanics • ...
Civics Test Study Guide 2021-09-27
Across
- Form of government where the people and their representatives hold all of the power.
- Government system which combines the legislative and executive branch.
- Four things that a government requires to make it a country.
- One leader holds absolute control over citizens.
- Government system where the executive branch is composed of a single person.
- A theory outlining a legitimacy of a government over its citizens.
- System where one person holds all of the power.
- Use of force to establish a government.
- Type of democracy where citizens directly serve in government decisions.
- A union of countries or nation-states into an alliance.
- Government system with three different branches of government.
Down
- Four basic functions a government must uphold.
- Government system where a single central government holds power.
- The authority of a nation to be self-governing.
- A system ruled by a king/queen.
- The absence of government.
- Sovereign state with a predominant ethnic culture.
- An elected leader of a democracy.
- A system governed by religion where God is the absolute authority.
- A system where a group of people hold all of the power.
- Type of democracy where citizens elect people to represent their interests in the government.
- A famous philosopher who created the political theory.
22 Clues: The absence of government. • A system ruled by a king/queen. • An elected leader of a democracy. • Use of force to establish a government. • Four basic functions a government must uphold. • The authority of a nation to be self-governing. • System where one person holds all of the power. • One leader holds absolute control over citizens. • ...
Competition and Monopolies 2025-09-24
Across
- a government-issued right to operate a business
- the removal of government controls over a market
- when two or more companies join to form a single firm
- an illegal agreement among firms to divide the market, set prices, or limit production
- a product, such as petroleum or milk, that is considered the same no matter who produces or sells it
- a license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell it for a specific period of time
- In such a market, every firm producing the same product for about the same price
- a market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical
Down
- the division of consumers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all of the output
- laws that encourage competition in the marketplace
- the expenses a new business must pay before it can begin to produce and sell goods
- an agreement among firms to charge one price for the same good
- a market in which a single seller dominates
- a market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market
15 Clues: a market in which a single seller dominates • a government-issued right to operate a business • the removal of government controls over a market • laws that encourage competition in the marketplace • when two or more companies join to form a single firm • an agreement among firms to charge one price for the same good • ...
I'm Your Scientist 2025-05-21
Across
- father of Evolution
- father of cell theory
- discovered "oxygen" through experiments
- father of taxonomy (last name only)
- father of human anatomy & grave robber
- discovered the "cell"
- the reason milk is safe to drink scientist
- father of Ecology (Von last name)
- discovered penicillin
- father of microbiology (last name only)
- hidden co-theory of evolution scientist
- discovered photosynthesis
- discovered the cell "nucleus"
- father of Botany
Down
- a co-founder of DNA structure (starts with a J)
- fossil collector struck by lightning as a baby
- discovered Insulin
- creator of the smallpox vaccine
- creator of the Polio vaccine
- father of Genetics
- DNA photo 54
- father of comparative anatomy
- 1st encyclopedia
- 1st Biologist and father of Zoology
24 Clues: DNA photo 54 • 1st encyclopedia • father of Botany • discovered Insulin • father of Genetics • father of Evolution • father of cell theory • discovered the "cell" • discovered penicillin • discovered photosynthesis • creator of the Polio vaccine • father of comparative anatomy • discovered the cell "nucleus" • creator of the smallpox vaccine • father of Ecology (Von last name) • ...
English A-Levels ALL 2026-03-06
Across
- forming a simpler word from a pre-existing more complex word
- language theory tied to utility of language
- structure of the language
- period of British and American history between the late 1800s and early 1900s where humans settled into cities, factory jobs became the norm, and technological production boomed
- the rules governing sentence arrangement and structure in a language
- theory that the structure of language determines a native speaker's view of the world
- when a word takes on a more positive connotation over time
- cultural or regional expression of a language
- view that language should be dictated by a set of precise rules and structures, how language SHOULD be spoken
- a famous dictionary that had its earliest stages created in 1787
- a form of media curated online by a large variety of users communicating with each other through rapid messages and public posts
- 2020s jargon that describes language and phrases derived from internet culture
- a version of the bible translated in 1611 that went on to become the most popularly used Bible in the world
- belonging to the past
- when a word takes on a more negative connotation over time
- this part of the writing structure states the claims you will argue throughout the essay
- phonological process where two sounds condense into one
- branch of linguistics that deals with HOW a language is used
- study of word forms
- the year the first text message was sent
- view that there is no proper way to speak a language and seeks to study how language IS spoken
- forming a new word from an existing word
- this part of the writing structure summarizes the essay or article you are discussing
- model of language change that insists language change branches off from other language facets
- study of handwriting
- language change theory suggesting language change occurs to fill in the open niches left in pre-established language patterns
Down
- graph showcasing language use over time
- event in the early 1500s where English vowel pronunciation diverged and greatly impacted English spelling
- study of spelling
- this man proposed an English academy in 1712
- study of language sounds, also called phonetics
- language change theory suggesting that language change is a product of unique occurrences
- vocabulary, stock of words in a language
- no longer in use
- sounds repeated with slight change, indicative of baby-speak
- language theory suggesting language change is tied to language being products of cultural artifacts
- model of language change that insists language change ripples from an epicenter
- two lexical items appearing frequently together
- language theory suggesting language change is due to spread and globalization
- 1844 invention that revolutionized language and communication
- study of sentence meaning and logic
- data about language use
- braj kacchru's theory that language is categorized into 3 groups with native speakers at the center
- playwright from the late 1500s that created plays that changed English language and the world
- history of a word
- creating a new word or word class from an existing one
- distinctive pronunciation within a language
- contracting a word or phrase to something smaller
- the idea that language change starts in a limited way, accelerates, and then levels off
- a word referencing the name of its inventor
50 Clues: no longer in use • study of spelling • history of a word • study of word forms • study of handwriting • belonging to the past • data about language use • structure of the language • study of sentence meaning and logic • graph showcasing language use over time • vocabulary, stock of words in a language • the year the first text message was sent • ...
Bentham and Kant 2021-06-11
Across
- First Imperative
- What we are morally obliged to follow
- An assumption of morality
- "Good will shines forth like a precious ______"
- Type of theory- Kant
- Name of Bentham's theory
- Imperatives which you are obligated to do
Down
- Kant's 'highest good'
- Calculus which is used to measure pleasure
- Type of theory- Bentham
- "The greatest good for the greatest ______"
- Principle of ________
12 Clues: First Imperative • Type of theory- Kant • Kant's 'highest good' • Principle of ________ • Type of theory- Bentham • Name of Bentham's theory • An assumption of morality • What we are morally obliged to follow • Imperatives which you are obligated to do • Calculus which is used to measure pleasure • "The greatest good for the greatest ______" • ...
Economics 2017-03-01
Across
- unemployment due to an economic decline
- lose job due to technological advances
- occurring at a very high rate
- réduction in the level of prices
- C+I+G is the equation for
- spiral used to explain the cause and effect
- theory price changes correspond to changes in he monetary supply
Down
- theory occurs when demand for goods/ services exceeds existing supplies
- theory increase prices of inputs like labor
- power the ability to purchase
- unemployed because of the season
- people changing jobs, or seeking thier first job
- inflation increases gradually, but continues over time
- rates a portion of a loan which has to be paid back
- money received
15 Clues: money received • C+I+G is the equation for • power the ability to purchase • occurring at a very high rate • unemployed because of the season • réduction in the level of prices • lose job due to technological advances • unemployment due to an economic decline • theory increase prices of inputs like labor • spiral used to explain the cause and effect • ...
Psy 101 Exam #2 Crossword 2018-03-28
Across
- The type of memories for shocking and/or emotion-provoking items.
- The process of bringing to mind information that has already been stored into the memory
- How many stages are in Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development?
- The mental processes involved in acquiring, storing, retrieving, and using information.
- The belief that the adolescent is, or will be, the focus of attention in social situations?(Hint: ________ Audience)
- The type of memories that are subject to positive bias.
- The type of test that measures what a person has learned up to a certain point in their life.
- A rule of thumb that is derived from experience or also known as “short-cuts”.
- In Lawrence Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development, what is the preconventional level based on?
- Short-term Memory is also known as what type of memory?
- The type of amnesia from the loss of memory for experiences that occurred shortly before a loss of consciousness.
- The inability to bring to mind information that was previously remembered.
Down
- The realization that objects continue to exist, even when they can no longer be perceived by the child.
- A strategy that increases the capacity of Short-Term memory.
- The type of decision-making process that is strongly influenced by emotion.
- The number of stages in Erik Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development?
- A type of memory organizes and stores permanent or relatively permanent memories
- The transforming of information into a form that can be stored into memory.
- The psychologist who theorized the Theory of Psychosocial Development (Last name only).
- The concept that a given quantity of matter remains the same despite being rearranged or changed in appearance.
- When an adult adjusts the amount of guidance provided to match a child’s current ability?
- The type of concepts that are clearly defined by a set of rules.
- The psychologist who developed the sociocultural approach to human development (Last Name only).
23 Clues: The type of memories that are subject to positive bias. • Short-term Memory is also known as what type of memory? • A strategy that increases the capacity of Short-Term memory. • The type of concepts that are clearly defined by a set of rules. • The type of memories for shocking and/or emotion-provoking items. • ...
Science and Technology 2024-08-16
Across
- Branch of physics dealing with the behavior of particles at small scales
- Molecule that carries genetic information in living organisms
- Global network connecting millions of computers
- Einstein's theory about space, time, and gravity
- Theory that species change over time through natural selection
- Field focused on designing and building robots
- Flow of electric charge used to power devices
- Materials that can be broken down by natural processes
- Drugs used to treat bacterial infections
- Theory that describes the origin of the universe
- The study and discovery of outer space through missions and telescopes
- Process by which plants make food using sunlight
Down
- Process of introducing a vaccine to produce immunity
- Energy sources that are naturally replenished, like wind and solar
- Force that pulls objects towards each other
- Science of manipulating materials at an atomic scale
- Region in space where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape
- Complete set of genes in an organism
- Technology that creates physical objects from digital models
- Field focused on creating machines that mimic human thinking
20 Clues: Complete set of genes in an organism • Drugs used to treat bacterial infections • Force that pulls objects towards each other • Flow of electric charge used to power devices • Field focused on designing and building robots • Global network connecting millions of computers • Einstein's theory about space, time, and gravity • ...
Evoltution Crossword 2023-05-15
Across
- physical, behavioral, and biochemical characteriscs
- a well-tested explination that unifies a broad range of observations
- inherited charactersitics that increase the chances of ones survival
- first step of speciation of finches began with founders from
- principle that all things were derived from a common anscestor
- a record of evoltution
- was once used by anscestors but is not longer in use
- Galapaos finches are a great example
- better suited = most likely to survive
- preserved remains
Down
- all members of a population can _____
- descent with _____
- may occur when a small group of individuals colonize a new habitat
- where Darwin spent most of his studying time
- type of gentic drift
- an organsims ability to survive and reproduce
- artifical selection as practiced by humans is also called...
- finches perfer mates with beak sizes______ to their own
- Darwin's theory of evolution was NOT infuenced by
- survive and ________
- compition among members of a species
- credited with the theory of evoltuion
- type of selection where one side is more benifited than the other
- change in species overtime
- type of selection where the center is the most benifited than the rest
25 Clues: preserved remains • descent with _____ • type of gentic drift • survive and ________ • a record of evoltution • change in species overtime • compition among members of a species • Galapaos finches are a great example • all members of a population can _____ • credited with the theory of evoltuion • better suited = most likely to survive • ...
The Hyzer theory... JK 2017-04-19
Across
- too much food eaten
- food into energy
- what fat people don't look at
- Lots of these in bananas
- what you want to eat
- too fat
Down
- lots of these in foods
- what fat people go on
- donuts, hamburgers and fries
- mostly an estimate
- your body needs it to function properly
- eat a lot and get rid of the weight
- mostly lies
- doesn't eat much cause you think you fat
- get these from vitamins
- unhealthy body image
- found in meats, milk and nuts
- what you are given to eat
- comes in pills and fruits
- image you think you fat
20 Clues: too fat • mostly lies • food into energy • mostly an estimate • too much food eaten • unhealthy body image • what you want to eat • what fat people go on • lots of these in foods • get these from vitamins • image you think you fat • Lots of these in bananas • what you are given to eat • comes in pills and fruits • donuts, hamburgers and fries • what fat people don't look at • ...
The Big Bang Theory 2025-03-24
Across
- – A temperature scale starting at absolute zero.
- Matter – Mysterious substance that doesn’t emit light but has gravity.
- – A pulsating star used to measure cosmic distances.
- – A dimension in which events occur in sequence.
- – The force governing electric and magnetic interactions.
- Bang Theory (Model) – The leading explanation for the universe’s beginning.
- – The distance light travels in a year.
- Density – The precise amount of matter needed for a flat universe.
- – The apparent shift in an object’s position due to different viewpoints.
- – A measure of heat energy in a system.
- Space Telescope – A famous orbital observatory providing deep-space images.
- (First Law) – Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred.
- – The study of the universe’s origin and structure.
Down
- Fusion – The process powering stars by combining atomic nuclei.
- – A pair of equal and opposite electric or magnetic charges.
- – A lengthening of light waves as objects move away.
- – A mirror-image counterpart to regular matter.
- Fireball – A hot, dense state of the early universe.
- Era – A cosmic period dominated by ordinary particles.
- – A point of infinite density at a black hole’s core.
- Background Radiation – The afterglow of the Big Bang.
- – An instrument that measures light intensity.
- Shift – The change in frequency of waves due to motion.
- – A shortening of light waves as objects move closer.
- – A rapid expansion of the universe just after the Big Bang.
25 Clues: – The distance light travels in a year. • – A measure of heat energy in a system. • – An instrument that measures light intensity. • – A mirror-image counterpart to regular matter. • – A temperature scale starting at absolute zero. • – A dimension in which events occur in sequence. • – The study of the universe’s origin and structure. • ...
The Big Bang Theory 2022-11-24
Across
- Oh Bernadette, please play my…
- Sheldon loves this character
- Bernadette works with this
- Sheldon’s from…
- Sheldon gave Amy a…
- Raj’s sister
- Raj can only talk to women when he’s…
- Howard’s last name
- The Roommate…
- there are this many seasons
- Leonard gave this to Penny, when he came back from the North Pole
- Raj’s last name
Down
- She doesn’t have a known last name
- Howard can’t truthfully call himself this
- he went to space
- the elevator was broken for this many years
- Howard does not have a Ph. D., but a…
- the initials of the place Penny worked at
- Raj is short for…
- Sheldon told a joke
- the last name of Sheldon’s sworn enemy
- Amy Farrah Fowler
22 Clues: Raj’s sister • The Roommate… • Sheldon’s from… • Raj’s last name • he went to space • Raj is short for… • Amy Farrah Fowler • Howard’s last name • Sheldon told a joke • Sheldon gave Amy a… • Bernadette works with this • there are this many seasons • Sheldon loves this character • Oh Bernadette, please play my… • She doesn’t have a known last name • Howard does not have a Ph. D., but a… • ...
Astronomy #1 2019-05-02
Across
- means to spin backwards
- Discovered planets move in ellipses
- Developed the Geocentric theory
- going around an object
- not too hot, not too cold, just right
- the lighter shadow of an eclipse
- the eclipse where the moon is blocked out
- the planet of extremes
- an eclipse where the sun is blocked out
Down
- The study of space and everything in it
- The trapping of heat in the atmosphere
- Discovered that Venus went through phases
- the spinning of Earth
- Developed the Heliocentric theory
- caused by Earth's tilt and revolution
- the darkest shadow of an eclipse
- Earth's twin
17 Clues: Earth's twin • the spinning of Earth • going around an object • the planet of extremes • means to spin backwards • Developed the Geocentric theory • the darkest shadow of an eclipse • the lighter shadow of an eclipse • Developed the Heliocentric theory • Discovered planets move in ellipses • caused by Earth's tilt and revolution • not too hot, not too cold, just right • ...
Scientific Revolution 2021-04-22
Across
- who made the heliocentric theory
- a step-by-step method of investigation involving observation and theory to test scientific assumptions
- stated the law of gravity in a simple formula
- the force of attraction between all masses in the universe
- invented the telescope
Down
- a theory that places the sun at the center of the solar system
- a major shift in thinking between 1500 and 1700 about the natural world
- a belief in reason and logic as the primary paths to knowledge
- a measure of amount of matter in an object
- scientists use it to make small objects appear much larger
- an idea or assumption to be tested in an experiment
- a theory that Earth is the center of the universe
12 Clues: invented the telescope • who made the heliocentric theory • a measure of amount of matter in an object • stated the law of gravity in a simple formula • a theory that Earth is the center of the universe • an idea or assumption to be tested in an experiment • scientists use it to make small objects appear much larger • ...
Scientific revolution 2024-05-14
Across
- a theory that earth is the center of the solar system or universe
- polish astronomer, wrote on the Revolution of the celestial Spheres
- First person to study the sky with a telescope
- German astronomer,mapped the orbits of the planets
- an instrument used to view distant objects
- a step-by-step method of investigation involving observation
- created laws about gravity and motion
- an idea or assumption to be tested in an experiment
- the force of attraction between all masses
Down
- a belief in reason and logic as the primary paths to knowledge
- a theory that places the sun at the center of the solar system
- modern science emerged as a new way of gaining knowledge
12 Clues: created laws about gravity and motion • an instrument used to view distant objects • the force of attraction between all masses • First person to study the sky with a telescope • German astronomer,mapped the orbits of the planets • an idea or assumption to be tested in an experiment • modern science emerged as a new way of gaining knowledge • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- When rivals match a price change.
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Has a first mover advantage
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
Down
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- Has a first mover advantage
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- When rivals match a price change.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
Down
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
AICE Marine Science Vocabulary Crossword 2023-10-10
Across
- Part of the continental drift theory was supported by the fact that the plates appeared to fit together like ______ pieces.
- The theory that all matter is consisted of many particles that are in random motion influenced by temperature with spaces in between particles.
- Upper layer of the Earth found everywhere but oceans.
- Process that most plants use to get energy by synthesizing carbon dioxide and water.
- All matter is made of tiny indivisible particles called _____.
- Plate boundary in which 2 plates slide past each other – the most famous example being the San Andreas Fault.
- Name given to the supercontinent in the continental drift theory.
Down
- The amount of energy/heat is required to increase the temperature of a material by a given amount.
- Air molecule that is essential for human life and is a byproduct of photosynthesis.
- Upper layer of the earth found in oceans.
- Plate boundary in which 2 plates slide away from each other.
- The process of taking in oxygen and producing energy in the form of ATP.
- Provided strong evidence towards the continental drift theory that gave scientists an idea of what species lived where.
- Air molecule that is essential for photosynthesis and is a byproduct of respiration.
- The center of the Earth made of primarily iron and nickel.
- Plate boundary in which 2 plates slide into each other – causes volcanoes and mountains.
- The layer of earth in which the surface layer floats on due to convection currents found in this layer.
17 Clues: Upper layer of the earth found in oceans. • Upper layer of the Earth found everywhere but oceans. • The center of the Earth made of primarily iron and nickel. • Plate boundary in which 2 plates slide away from each other. • All matter is made of tiny indivisible particles called _____. • Name given to the supercontinent in the continental drift theory. • ...
BASIC ACCOUNTING TERMS 2022-07-19
Across
- THE RECORD OF ALL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS RELATED TO A PARTICULAR PERSON OR ICON.
- AMOUNT WHICH FIRM OWES TO OUTSIDER.
- OUTCOME OR RESULT OF ALL BUSINESS ACTIVITIES.
- AMOUNT WITHDRAWN BY PROPRIETOR FOR PERSONAL USE.
- AMOUNT SPENT ON PURCHASE OF ASSETS.
- IT REFERS TO GOODS TO BE SOLD.
- PERSON WHO INVESTS THE AMOUNT IN BUSINESS AND BEAR ALL THE RISKS.
- A PERSON WHO IS NOT IN A POSITION TO PAY HIS DEBTS
- FALL IN THE VALUE OF ASSET.
- LEFT SIDE OF THE ACCOUNT.
- GOODS WHICH REMAIN UNSOLD ON A PARTICULAR DATE.
Down
- ASSETS WHICH HAVE PHYSICAL ASSISTANCE.
- ASSETS WHICH ARE NEITHER TANGIBLE NOR INTANGIBLE.
- A FIRM OR A PERSON WHO PROVIDES GOODS AND SERVICES ON CREDIT.
- SOURCE DOCUMENT WHICH SERVES THE PURPOSE OF EVIDENCE OF TRANSACTION TAKEN PLACE.
- DISCOUNT ALLOWED WHEN GOODS ARE OF POOR QUALITY, DEFECTIVE OR IN EXCESS SUPPLY.
- AMOUNT SPENT TO GENERATE REVENUE LIKE PURCHASE OF GOODS AND SERVICES.
- ITEMS PURCHASED FOR RESALE,OR FOR MANUFACTURING THE FINISHED PRODUCTS.
- REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF GOODS SOLD.
- AMOUNT EARNED FROM TRANSACTIONS RELATED TO BUSINESS.
- AMOUNT SPENT ON PURCHASE OR MANUFACTURE OF GOODS
21 Clues: LEFT SIDE OF THE ACCOUNT. • FALL IN THE VALUE OF ASSET. • IT REFERS TO GOODS TO BE SOLD. • AMOUNT WHICH FIRM OWES TO OUTSIDER. • AMOUNT SPENT ON PURCHASE OF ASSETS. • REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF GOODS SOLD. • ASSETS WHICH HAVE PHYSICAL ASSISTANCE. • OUTCOME OR RESULT OF ALL BUSINESS ACTIVITIES. • GOODS WHICH REMAIN UNSOLD ON A PARTICULAR DATE. • ...
Cost of Capital 2022-02-13
Across
- debt which has no redemption period
- cost of each source or component
- portion of undistributed profits
- cost of raising debt
- issuing _____ increases the shareholder base
Down
- method of calculation of WACC
- regular pay out for debt funds
- does not have any say in the day to day running of the business
- payment of _____ does not give tax benefit to the firm
- increases the financial risk of the firm
10 Clues: cost of raising debt • method of calculation of WACC • regular pay out for debt funds • cost of each source or component • portion of undistributed profits • debt which has no redemption period • increases the financial risk of the firm • issuing _____ increases the shareholder base • payment of _____ does not give tax benefit to the firm • ...
Medicine Through Time 2025-04-29
Across
- Discovered Penicillin through luck
- Banned by the Catholic Church
- Biggest cause of lung cancer
- Found the bacteria that causes diphtheria
- Invented antiseptics
- Discovered germs in 1861
- A way of showing God you are sorry
- A journey to a religious site
- Mass produced penicillin along with Chain
- Period of 100 years
- Declining power of the Catholic Church
- Method of identifying how someone is ill
Down
- Found over 300 errors in Galen's work
- Helped to improve the reputation of nursing
- Method of preventing disease
- Less invasive method of surgery
- Created the printing press
- Used chloroform as an anesthetic
- Created the Theory of Opposites
- Renaissance common theory of illness
- Had a scientific approach to medicine
21 Clues: Period of 100 years • Invented antiseptics • Discovered germs in 1861 • Created the printing press • Method of preventing disease • Biggest cause of lung cancer • Banned by the Catholic Church • A journey to a religious site • Less invasive method of surgery • Created the Theory of Opposites • Used chloroform as an anesthetic • Discovered Penicillin through luck • ...
National Day 2022-09-12
Across
- the process of receiving knowledge
- king of saudi arabia
- the quality of being wise
- the state of being young
- to restore to a former better state
- the drive to achieve a goal
- being mentally stimulated
- regard with great respect
- first linear smart city in KSA
- the accomplishment of an aim
- being physically strong
- the Maldives of Saudi Arabia
- where one lives as a family
- confidence in the success of future
- Holy capital in Islam
- The founder of Saudi arabia
- the resting place of prophet Mohammad
- a feeling of great pleasure
Down
- a country ruled by a king
- Capital of Saudi Arabia
- amusing
- a smart city being built in Tabuk
- a special national ceremony on 23/9
- Our school name
- the crown prince
- the state of being happy.
- firm adherence to moral values
- firm belief in the ability of someone passion barely controllable emotion
- main climate zone in saudi arabia
- the religion of the Muslims
- number one form of renewable energy
- the state of being united
- Most famous Mountain in Riyadh
- a state in which there is no war
- Main city on the Red Sea
- plan the future with imagination
- the plateau in central arabia
37 Clues: amusing • Our school name • the crown prince • king of saudi arabia • Holy capital in Islam • Capital of Saudi Arabia • being physically strong • the state of being young • Main city on the Red Sea • a country ruled by a king • the quality of being wise • the state of being happy. • being mentally stimulated • regard with great respect • the state of being united • the drive to achieve a goal • ...
Mathematicians 2018-02-15
Across
- Discovered quaternions
- Defined laws of fall and pendulum
- leading figure of fractal geometry
- Founder of graph theory
- Proposed 23 problems for the 20th century
- Introduced symbols to algebra
- inventor of algebra
- Author of elements of geometry
- Developer of math behind complex waves.
- proved fermat’s theorem
- developed field of fluid dynamics
Down
- First iranian female mathematician to receive field medal
- calculated the size of earth
- invented Boolean algebra and logic
- Gave general method to find solution of Pell's Equation.
- Famous for incompleteness theorem
- founder figure of set theory
- inventor of planar coordinates
- Developed trigonometry
- calculated first accurate calculation of pi
20 Clues: inventor of algebra • Discovered quaternions • Developed trigonometry • Founder of graph theory • proved fermat’s theorem • calculated the size of earth • founder figure of set theory • Introduced symbols to algebra • inventor of planar coordinates • Author of elements of geometry • Famous for incompleteness theorem • Defined laws of fall and pendulum • ...
IEBE 2025-05-08
Across
- Ethical theory based on outcomes
- Systematic evaluation of ethical practices in business
- Responsibility of business towards society and environment
- Model of leadership rooted in Indian tradition
- Ancient Indian scriptures containing management lessons
- Indian leadership model based on karma and compassion
- A spiritually enlightened guide in Indian corporate models
- Principles of right and wrong in business conduct
- Written set of guidelines for ethical behavior
- Righteous duty or moral order
- Triguna element representing inertia and ignorance
- Long-term ethical commitment to environment and society
- Psychologist known for six stages of moral development
Down
- Last name of scholar who proposed the ethical fitness model
- Ethical theory based on duty or rules
- Filter model for ethical decisions (P-L-U-S)
- Law of cause and effect; central to Indian philosophy
- Theory integrating Western and Eastern management
- Author of Arthashastra; leadership strategist
- Triguna element representing activity and passion
- Abbreviation for UN’s 17 global goals
- Core belief influencing behavior and decisions
- Inner character and guiding values
- Quality of purity and balance in Triguna theory
- Model of ethical decision-making process (S-T-E-P)
25 Clues: Righteous duty or moral order • Ethical theory based on outcomes • Inner character and guiding values • Ethical theory based on duty or rules • Abbreviation for UN’s 17 global goals • Filter model for ethical decisions (P-L-U-S) • Author of Arthashastra; leadership strategist • Model of leadership rooted in Indian tradition • Core belief influencing behavior and decisions • ...
Famous Scientists & Inventions 🔬 2025-09-26
Across
- – Developed pasteurization and vaccines
- – Invented the practical electric bulb
- – Invented the wireless radio
- – Discovered penicillin
- – Ancient Greek scientist, formulated the principle of buoyancy
- – Discovered the law of gravity
- – Improved the telescope, supported heliocentric theory
- – Co-discovered the structure of DNA
- – Discovered infrared radiation
Down
- – Theoretical physicist known for black hole research
- – Conducted pioneering research on radioactivity
- – Developed the first smallpox vaccine
- Brothers – Invented and flew the first successful airplane
- – Proposed the Theory of Relativity
- – Pioneer of alternating current (AC) electricity
- – Invented the telephone
- – Pioneered work in electromagnetism and electrochemistry
- – Known for Boyle’s law in chemistry
- – Co-discovered the structure of DNA
- – Father of modern computer science and AI concepts
20 Clues: – Discovered penicillin • – Invented the telephone • – Invented the wireless radio • – Discovered the law of gravity • – Discovered infrared radiation • – Proposed the Theory of Relativity • – Known for Boyle’s law in chemistry • – Co-discovered the structure of DNA • – Co-discovered the structure of DNA • – Developed the first smallpox vaccine • ...
Innovations Unit Crossword 2025-12-16
Across
- Came up w/Heliocentric Theory
- May have dug up bodies, but for a good cause
- Thanks to him, you can scuba dive
- A destination for many due to jobs
- Coal and ______ helped fuel the IR
- The type of engine that drove the IR
- BFTP: Father of Communism; inspired Lenin
- The birthplace of the Renaissance
- Michelangelo sculpted this
- Probably the main cause of the Ren.
- Biology labs benefit from this man's work
Down
- An effect of IR
- Painted School of Athens
- What is our potential, it asks
- The Chapel Michelangelo painted
- A focus on the ancients
- Smallpox vaccine creator
- Some textile workers suffered from this
- Proved Heliocentric Theory
- BFTP: Killed in a bathtub for his words
20 Clues: An effect of IR • A focus on the ancients • Painted School of Athens • Smallpox vaccine creator • Proved Heliocentric Theory • Michelangelo sculpted this • Came up w/Heliocentric Theory • What is our potential, it asks • The Chapel Michelangelo painted • Thanks to him, you can scuba dive • The birthplace of the Renaissance • A destination for many due to jobs • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2023-11-15
Across
- a process of action, reaction, and interaction whereby nurse and client share information about their perceptions in the nursing situation
- how does Margaret Newman's Theory of symphonology view health and illness
- describes a perceptual stance or embodied knowledge whereby aspects of a situation stand out as more or less important
- A clinical experience that stands out and alters the way the nurse will perceive and understand future clinical situations
- it characterizes the total caring reality and is based on cultural elements such as traditions, rituals, and basic values
- a stablle flow rather than a static state
- _____ and wholeness become the starting points, the midpoints, and the open endings for the outgoing, evolving and unfolding of the human condition
- completes the wholeness of the individual
- It is the direct and implementation of the plan
- King's Theory of Goal Attainment emphasized _____ in nurse-patient interactions
Down
- are series and sequences of deliberate practical actions of nurses performed at times in coordination with the actions of their patients to know and meet components of patients' therapeutic self-care demands and to protect and regulate the exercise of development of patients self-care agency
- it is the opposite of self-care in Dorothea Orem's theory
- it means love and charity, eros and agape are united, and by nature it is unconditional love
- stimulus the internal or external stimulus most immediately confronting the human system
- the client's internal and external sources are used to strengthen internal lines of resistance, reduce the reaction, and increase resistance factors
- in Callista Roy's Theory of Adaptation, it is determined to be the main goal of nursing
- in goal attainment it is the continuation of transaction
- describes the unpredictable but continuous, nonlinear evolution of energy fields as evidenced by nonrepeating rhythmicities
- A guide for the core of nursing. This term is is used to contrast with conventional medicine's curative factors
- the human field and the environment field are constantly exchanging energy
20 Clues: a stablle flow rather than a static state • completes the wholeness of the individual • It is the direct and implementation of the plan • in goal attainment it is the continuation of transaction • it is the opposite of self-care in Dorothea Orem's theory • how does Margaret Newman's Theory of symphonology view health and illness • ...
07 Summary Vocabulary 2025-11-20
Across
- In a way that is impossible to untangle or separate.
- Earnest attempts or strenuous efforts to achieve a goal.
- Geographic region including Oregon and Washington, bounded by the ocean and the Rockies.
- A government's strategy in dealing with other nations.
- Carried out or brought to realization; satisfied.
- The activity of buying and selling, especially on a large scale.
- A firm decision to do something, or the solving of a problem.
- An arrival or entry of large numbers of people or things.
- The formal giving up of rights, property, or territory
- To encourage development or trigger interest
- Supreme power or authority; the right of a state to govern itself.
- The formal act of adding territory to one's own territory by appropriation.
- The process of making an area more city-like; population shift from rural to city.
- Something left or handed down by a predecessor.
Down
- Beaten out or shaped by hammering; caused to happen.
- A person dedicated to promoting human welfare and social reform.
- Destiny 19th-century doctrine believing US expansion was inevitable and divinely ordained.
- Relating to the structure of populations, such as age, race, or income.
- A sudden powerful forward or upward movement; a rush.
- A condition attached to an agreement
- Theory describing factors that drive people away from a place or attract them to a new one.
- A warning or indication of a future event
- The policy of territorial or economic growth.
- An asset or object bought or obtained; the act of gaining possession.
- A place, event, or time at which trouble, such as violence or anger, flares up.
- Power concentrated in a single governing body rather than distributed locally.
26 Clues: A condition attached to an agreement • A warning or indication of a future event • To encourage development or trigger interest • The policy of territorial or economic growth. • Something left or handed down by a predecessor. • Carried out or brought to realization; satisfied. • Beaten out or shaped by hammering; caused to happen. • ...
Emma Dumm 6.1, 6.2 Key Id's 2020-12-07
Across
- a new intellectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of individuals to solve problems
- believed that people could learn from experience and improve themselves
- agreement by which the people created the gov't
- brought together others' breakthroughs under a single theory of motion
- a change in European thought
- what Copernicus came up with about the sun
- the earth centered view of the universe
- passionately committed to individual freedom
Down
- influential French writer
- built on new theories about astronomy
- published an essay called A Vindication of the Rights of Woman in 1792.
- François Marie Arouet's pen name
- Copernicus's sun centered theory
- people who wanted to discuss politics and ideas
- logical procedure for testing and gathering ideas
15 Clues: influential French writer • a change in European thought • François Marie Arouet's pen name • Copernicus's sun centered theory • built on new theories about astronomy • the earth centered view of the universe • what Copernicus came up with about the sun • passionately committed to individual freedom • agreement by which the people created the gov't • ...
Plate tectonics 2013-12-08
Across
- boundary The boundary of plates that collide (also know as a destructive boundary)
- Time Scale A way to date rock by looking at little bits of iron in the rock and use that and the fact that the earth magnetic field has shifted
- A supercontinent that was made of all the continents
- boundaries The boundary of plate, there are three types
- Plastic like layer of the earth than the lithospheric plates float on
- boundary The boundary of plates that are moving away, and then cause lava to flow through the new crack in the earths crust (also know as a constructive boundary)
- boundary The boundary of plates that slide by each other, and causes earthquakes.
- Wegener Continental drift was his theory
Down
- ridge A underwater mountain range that the plates are moving apart and new land is being made
- One of two supercontinent that separated from pangaea
- Layer of earth's crust that is about 100 km thick, made of the crust and the upper mantle
- current currents in earth's mantle and is the cause of plate tectonics
- valley A valley between highlands caused by a fault
- The second layer of the earth, made of lava
- Drift Wegener's theory that all the continents were once we a part of a supercontinent
- floor spreading Hess's theory that new sea floor forms when magma is forced up by plates moving apart
- Hess Sea Floor spreading was his theory
- The point after a surface rock reaches its elastic limit and brake
18 Clues: Hess Sea Floor spreading was his theory • Wegener Continental drift was his theory • The second layer of the earth, made of lava • valley A valley between highlands caused by a fault • One of two supercontinent that separated from pangaea • A supercontinent that was made of all the continents • boundaries The boundary of plate, there are three types • ...
GB Peng Ch 4 2019-05-27
Across
- a process of market competition through which unique products that command high prices and high margins gradually lose their ability to do so, thus becoming commodities
- moving formally offshored activities back ot the home country of the focal firm
- the tangible and intangible assets a firm uses to choose and implement its strategies
Down
- a series of activities used in t he production of goods and services that make a product or service more valuable (two words)
- outsourcing to an international firm
- oursourcing to a domestic firm
- setting up subsidiaries abroad so that the work is done in-house but the location is foreign
- turning over an activity to an outside supplier that will perform it on behalf of the focal firm
8 Clues: oursourcing to a domestic firm • outsourcing to an international firm • moving formally offshored activities back ot the home country of the focal firm • the tangible and intangible assets a firm uses to choose and implement its strategies • setting up subsidiaries abroad so that the work is done in-house but the location is foreign • ...
Scientific Revolution 2014-11-12
Across
- science as a multiple-step process
- reason, not tradition, is the source of all knowledge
- study of the stars
- the theory that the heavier the object the faster it falls
- the theory that the sun is in the center of the universe and all heavenly bodies circle around it excluding Earth
- man who argued for experimental methodology
- the scientific revolution ended with this man
- 2nd century CE Greek astronomer, mathematician, and geographer
Down
- the belief that experience is the only source of knowledge
- transforming metal to gold
- wrote then"Commentariolus"
- last name of man who was known as the father of rationalism
- the theory that the earth is in the center of the universe and all heavenly bodies circle around it
- man who founded empiricism
- 4th century BCE Greek philosopher and scientist
15 Clues: study of the stars • transforming metal to gold • wrote then"Commentariolus" • man who founded empiricism • science as a multiple-step process • man who argued for experimental methodology • the scientific revolution ended with this man • 4th century BCE Greek philosopher and scientist • reason, not tradition, is the source of all knowledge • ...
TFN CROSSWORD 2019-11-22
Across
- Are capable of prolonging reflection through strategies such as asking question.
- Published her Theory of Interpersonal relationship.
- According to Roy, human are holistic,adaptive system.
- Theorist of “Health Care System Model”
- To promote adaptation and maintain wholeness by using the principles of conservation.
- Have the right to knowledge about them selves and to participate in decisions.
- It reflects adjustments and adaptation that are successful in some way and to some degree.
- Not specified, but might be considered as included in the sequence of behaviors described in action.action.
- Means Love and Charity
- Theorist of “Science of Unitary Human Beings”
Down
- The Behavioral system Model of Nursing was developed by
- Stage of Nursing Process wherein the nurse begins using the nursing care plan
- Nursing need theory Was developed by
- Creates environment in which healing can occur.
- In pender Theory, it is defined as characterized as biological, psychological and socio-cultural.
- A work wherein it has a great impact on nursing curriculum development
- This conditions can be considered a manifestation of the total pattern of the individual.
- “The Founder of Nursing”
- The energy field of the human being interacts with the energy field.
- Is the disease applying medical knowledge according to Lydia Hall.
20 Clues: Means Love and Charity • “The Founder of Nursing” • Nursing need theory Was developed by • Theorist of “Health Care System Model” • Theorist of “Science of Unitary Human Beings” • Creates environment in which healing can occur. • Published her Theory of Interpersonal relationship. • According to Roy, human are holistic,adaptive system. • ...
Plate Tectonics 2021-11-07
Across
- supercontinent named by Wegener
- two plates that slide past
- theory of tectonic plates
- came up with the theory of seafloor spreading
- originated the theory of continental drift
- theory of Alfred Wegener
Down
- two plates that collide
- Harry Hess’ hypothesis
- two plates that separate
- individually sites of upwelling material
10 Clues: Harry Hess’ hypothesis • two plates that collide • two plates that separate • theory of Alfred Wegener • theory of tectonic plates • two plates that slide past • supercontinent named by Wegener • individually sites of upwelling material • originated the theory of continental drift • came up with the theory of seafloor spreading
Political systems 2019-08-16
15 Clues: Locke • Carta • Powers • theory • Powers • theory • Powers • of Right • contract • of nature • Autocracy • government • right theory • Petition of Right • features of a state
Intellectual Revolutions and Society 2022-03-31
Across
- sun is the center of the solar system having the earth revolving around it
- he is called the father of evolution
- refers to the paradigm shift of how the earth and sun were placed in the universe
- describe the absolute perception of the universe with the earth as its center
- developed his own telescope and observed Venus
- the unconscious realm of higher morality
- polish astronomer in the 16th century who created the theory about Copernican revolution and the heliocentric model
- it is often described as survival of the fittest
- he developed a compromise between the heliocentric and geocentric model of the universe
- the small amount of mental activity we know about
- the small amount of mental activity we know about
Down
- this is the conscious self
- it is the theory of evolution by charles darwin
- things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried
- a scientific method of understanding inner and unconscious conflicts embedded with one's personality, springing from free associations, dream and fantasies of the individual
- he created the law of gravitation
- things we are unaware of and can not become aware of
- he developed the theory of psychoanalysis
- he said that all planets move in elliptical orbits
- refers to series of event that led to the emergence the geocentric model
20 Clues: this is the conscious self • he created the law of gravitation • he is called the father of evolution • the unconscious realm of higher morality • he developed the theory of psychoanalysis • developed his own telescope and observed Venus • it is the theory of evolution by charles darwin • it is often described as survival of the fittest • ...
Review 2021-12-14
Theory Review 2015-10-22
Across
- in Critical Disability Theory, the belief that science and medicine should not separate the needs of disabled persons, but work for the welfare of all people
- the voluntary or forced migration of peoples from their native homelands
- this branch of feminism's primary goal is gender equality in the public sphere; private sphere issues are explored in terms of their impact on public sphere inequalities
- a study of the effects of colonialism on cultures and societies
- Critical Disability Theorists explore how our use of this reflects our discomfort with disability
- this branch of feminism is concerned with the oppressive nature of capitalism; connects the oppression of women with other oppression in society
- the power of the ruling class to convince others that their interests are the interests of all
- new transcultural forms that result from cross-cultural exchange - it is not necessarily a peaceful mixture
Down
- the process by which a cultural practice is made stimulating and exciting by its difference from the colonizer’s ideas of normalcy
- views gender as a social construct and maintains that definitions of gender and sexuality are non-binary, and constantly in flux
- a refusal to use the language of the colonizer in the correct or standard way
- in Critical Disability Theory, the position that disabled persons are oppressed by multiple systems, not just ableism
- in Post-Colonial Theory, this involves the colonized taking the language of their colonizers, and blending with their native languages, thus creating their own rules of usage
- this branch of feminism emphasizes essential differences between men and women, and advocates for equally valuing “female” occupations and values
- the state of being “other” or different, and the study of the ways in which one group differentiates itself from others
- in Critical Disability Theory, this issue is about representation
- Critical Disability Theory is concerned with these, both individually and socially
- this branch of feminism is more militant in approach than other branches, they oppose existing social structures as inherently tied to patriarchy
18 Clues: a study of the effects of colonialism on cultures and societies • in Critical Disability Theory, this issue is about representation • the voluntary or forced migration of peoples from their native homelands • a refusal to use the language of the colonizer in the correct or standard way • ...
New ideas 2023-05-04
Across
- painted biblical accurate pictures
- invented the printing press
- Cut open dead bodies to learn
- famous work by Leonardo Da Vinci
- invented rationalism
- series of tests to analyze evidence
- a theory that the sun was the center of the universe
- proved elements make up matter
Down
- discovered gravity
- instrument that measure air pressure
- laws made by Newton
- belief that reason is the path to knowledge
- Scientific instrument that let people see farther
- had the idea that the sun was the center of the universe
- made the banking system
- a way of showing people in different angles
- Father of Humanism
- explanation why things happen
- discovered Jupiter's moons
- developed the scientific method
20 Clues: discovered gravity • Father of Humanism • laws made by Newton • invented rationalism • made the banking system • discovered Jupiter's moons • invented the printing press • Cut open dead bodies to learn • explanation why things happen • proved elements make up matter • developed the scientific method • famous work by Leonardo Da Vinci • painted biblical accurate pictures • ...
The Atomic Theory Scientists 2015-02-12
Across
- His work, called a "classical example of the scientific method," was the second and last of his independent publications.
- Suggested that mesons and baryons are composites of three quarks or antiquarks.
- His theory proposed that all matter was composed of atoms.
- Measured the charge on an electron with the apparatus shown below.
- Discovered the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter have wave properties.
- Awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on the transmutation of elements and the chemistry of radioactive material.
Down
- Awarded the 1932 Nobel Prize in Physics for the creation of quantum mechanic.
- Studied the effects of sending an electric current through a gas in a sealed tube.
- Used the idea of quanta to explain hot glowing matter
- The first proponents of an atomic theory were these Greek philosophers.
- Combined the equations for the behavior of waves with the de Broglie equation to generate a mathematical model for the distribution of electrons in an atom.
- Published a highly controversial proposal concerning the nature of light.
- Proposed a theory for the hydrogen atom based on quantum theory that energy is transferred only in certain well defined quantities.
- Taught by Plato and also taught the renowned Alexander the Great.
- Received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of the neutron.
- Proved that the Hydrogen atom contained only one single electron.
16 Clues: Used the idea of quanta to explain hot glowing matter • His theory proposed that all matter was composed of atoms. • Taught by Plato and also taught the renowned Alexander the Great. • Proved that the Hydrogen atom contained only one single electron. • Measured the charge on an electron with the apparatus shown below. • ...
THE FRAMEWORK 2025-07-02
Across
- philosopher associated with the concept of 'justice as fairness
- "science"
- A Cardinal Virtue. (J)
- theory of morality that derives duty
- a theory or system of philosophical ideas that explain ethical issues
- A Cardinal Virtue. (T)
- philosopher's ethics is known as 'natural law
- A German thinker (1724-1804)
- ultimate purpose of human life according to Aristotle
Down
- A Cardinal Virtue. (P)
- ethical theory is based on duty and moral obligations
- This ethical framework emphasizes traits of character essential to human flourishing?
- enables individuals to pursue their conceptions of what is good and not
- "telos"
- wrote the story of an imperial message
15 Clues: "telos" • "science" • A Cardinal Virtue. (P) • A Cardinal Virtue. (J) • A Cardinal Virtue. (T) • A German thinker (1724-1804) • theory of morality that derives duty • wrote the story of an imperial message • philosopher's ethics is known as 'natural law • ethical theory is based on duty and moral obligations • ultimate purpose of human life according to Aristotle • ...
earth and space science 2021-06-02
Across
- Any size group of interacting parts that form a complex whole.
- The 4th step of the Nebular Theory.
- Everything that surrounds and influences an organism.
- The thin, rocky outer layer of Earth.
- The study of the earth
- they study of the oceans
- The innermost layer of Earth, located beneath the mantle.
- The water portion of Earth.
- The 2nd step of the Nebular Theory.Closed closed System Matter does not leave or enter the system, but energy does.
Down
- A well-established, reliable explanation of a natural or physical phenomenon.
- The thin, gaseous envelope that surrounds Earth
- The parts of the solid Earth, hydrosphere, and atmosphere in which living organisms can be found.
- The 1st step of the Nebular Theory.
- The study of the atmosphere and the processes that produce weather and climate.
- A scientific explanation for a set of observations that can be tested in ways that support or reject it.
15 Clues: The study of the earth • they study of the oceans • The water portion of Earth. • The 4th step of the Nebular Theory. • The 1st step of the Nebular Theory. • The thin, rocky outer layer of Earth. • The thin, gaseous envelope that surrounds Earth • Everything that surrounds and influences an organism. • The innermost layer of Earth, located beneath the mantle. • ...
Crossword Puzzle World Literature 2021-01-16
Across
- daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton
- The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights
- has a power
- adopted heathcliff
- protagonist in the stor
- the story taken
- heathcliff love of her life
- heathcliffs wife
- lacks power
Down
- the another literary theory of the story
- the foil in the story
- who longs to spend the rest of his life with catherine
- literary theory of the story
- the son of Heathcliff and Isabella
- authors of the story
- What kind of point of view is the stors Wuthering Heights
- is the power to get the others to do necessary work to produce goods and services they want
- title of the story
- son of hindley
- the one who maltreated and abuse heathcliff
20 Clues: has a power • lacks power • son of hindley • the story taken • heathcliffs wife • adopted heathcliff • title of the story • authors of the story • the foil in the story • protagonist in the stor • heathcliff love of her life • literary theory of the story • the son of Heathcliff and Isabella • daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton • The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights • ...
Serena & Clara 2026-02-20
Across
- Scientist who created analytical geometry, helped develop scientific method
- the people who presented new ways of thinking during the enlightenment
- The governed will give up some rights and the government will do the best for its people
- Scientist who created the idea that there is more than 4 elements
- Philisophe that believed that the ones who had to abide by the law should write the laws
- Philisophe against cruel and unusual punishments
- Philisophe that proposed checks and balances
- Scientist who created three laws of motion and discovered gravity
Down
- Philisophe that proposed freedom of religion and speech
- Scientist that used a microscope to examine bacteria and bloodcells
- Person with absolute power
- Scientist who created the heliocentric theory
- Scientist who developed the experimental method, helped develop scientific method
- Philisophe who proposed that we have three natural rights
- The theory that the sun is the center of the solar system
- Philisophe that criticized unequal rights between men and women
- Philisophe that Created the social contract
- Scientist who created the laws of planetary motion
- Scientist who developed the first vaccine
- Scientist who proved Heliocentric theory, was put under house arrest
- Parties where people met to discuss ideas
21 Clues: Person with absolute power • Scientist who developed the first vaccine • Parties where people met to discuss ideas • Philisophe that Created the social contract • Philisophe that proposed checks and balances • Scientist who created the heliocentric theory • Philisophe against cruel and unusual punishments • Scientist who created the laws of planetary motion • ...
Cell Vocabulary Crossword Puzzle 2014-11-26
Across
- membrane border that seperates nucleus
- used for lipid transport
- membrane regulates the entry and exit
- involved in the transport of materials
- produces proteins
- cell will swell
- "jello" containing organelles
- movement of molecules into low concentration
- site of photosynthesis
- smallest structural and functional unit of an organism
Down
- command center of the brain
- theory scientific theory which describes the properties of cells
- specialized part of a cell having some specific function
- transport requires energy moving into higher concetration
- provides energy
- wall guard
- "brain" of the cell
- storage area for food and water
- body sorts,packages,and distributes materials
- ER transports proteins
- transport energy not required moving into higher concetration
21 Clues: wall guard • provides energy • cell will swell • produces proteins • "brain" of the cell • site of photosynthesis • ER transports proteins • used for lipid transport • command center of the brain • "jello" containing organelles • storage area for food and water • membrane regulates the entry and exit • membrane border that seperates nucleus • involved in the transport of materials • ...
Chapter 5 2025-03-10
Across
- A steady internal balance, or equilibrium
- point: A value that is defended to maintain homeostasis
- theory: A theory of emotion featuring the simultaneous and independent occurrence of physical sensations and subjective feelings during an emotional experience
- reward: A reward from an outside source
- A type of sugar that plays an important role in hunger levels
- A sense of feeling full; not requiring further food
- reward: A reward that arises internally
- A combination of arousal, physical sensations, and subjective feelings that occurs spontaneously in response to environmental stimuli
- mass index (BMI): A height-to-weight ratio used to identify healthy weight, underweight, overweight, and obesity
- Regions of cortex located at the junction of the frontal and temporal lobes
- An eating disorder characterized by the maintenance of unusually low body weight and a distorted body image
Down
- A process that arouses, maintains, and guides behavior toward a goal
- A hormone secreted by fat cells that helps the body maintain an appropriate level of stored fat
- theory: A theory of emotion that proposes that physical sensations lead to subjective feelings
- A reward that pulls an organism’s behavior in a particular direction
- A state of tension and arousal triggered by cues important for survival
- reduction: The state of relief and reward produced by removing the tension and arousal of the drive state
- nervosa: An eating disorder characterized by bingeing, purging, and having feelings of depression, disgust, and lost control
- law: A description of the relationships between task complexity, arousal, and performance
- rule: A cultural norm that specifies when, where, and how a person should express an emotion
20 Clues: reward: A reward from an outside source • reward: A reward that arises internally • A steady internal balance, or equilibrium • A sense of feeling full; not requiring further food • point: A value that is defended to maintain homeostasis • A type of sugar that plays an important role in hunger levels • ...
Motivation Review 2023-02-28
Across
- Theory that motivation is driven by human needs
- Staying focusing with maximum effort to achieve the goal
- Different mindsets can influence motivation
- Race, nationality, language or religion
- Food, water, sleep, oxygen
- Making the decision to pursue a goal
- Theory that motivation is focused on the reward
Down
- Continuing to pursue a goal despite obstacles
- Motivation can be a product of your surroundings
- Theory that motivation is focused on the outcome
- Theory that motivation is driven by evolution
- Mindset used with internal motivation
- The driving force for an action, though or behavior
- Mindset where you measure how you measure up to others
14 Clues: Food, water, sleep, oxygen • Making the decision to pursue a goal • Mindset used with internal motivation • Race, nationality, language or religion • Different mindsets can influence motivation • Continuing to pursue a goal despite obstacles • Theory that motivation is driven by evolution • Theory that motivation is driven by human needs • ...
Tectonic plates 2024-12-18
Across
- a scientist that studies rock and earth's crust
- The name of the scientist that developed the theory of continental drift
- the theory that the continents drift apart
- when 2 plates move away from each other
- a natural force on earth that holds plates together
- when plates move toward each other
- the 2nd layer of earth
- the remains of a prehistoric orgainsum that were presurved
Down
- a break in the rock of earth's crust or mantle
- the theory that the oldest rock is at the bottom and youngest on the top
- when 2 plates slip past each other
- a natural formation formed at convergent boundaries
- the force that acts on rock to change it's shape or volume
- a molten mixture of rock forming substances from the mantle
- a structure that forms in earth's crust when magma reaches the earth's surface
- An area of the mantle where hot rock rises upward
- Most if not all the continent where conected and made a super continect
- Earth's surface is broken up into more than a dozen distance plates
- The type of thermal energy transfer that takes place in earth mantle
- The shaking and trembling of a plate after it releases stress
20 Clues: the 2nd layer of earth • when 2 plates slip past each other • when plates move toward each other • when 2 plates move away from each other • the theory that the continents drift apart • a break in the rock of earth's crust or mantle • a scientist that studies rock and earth's crust • An area of the mantle where hot rock rises upward • ...
The big bang theory 2024-08-22
Across
- Di quale stato è originaria la famiglia di Sheldon?
- A chi salva la vita il Signor Koothrappali nella 8x11?
- Per imparare quale videogioco Bernadette chiede aiuto a Denise?
- Completa il nome della fumetteria di Stuart: "... center"
- Come sono le paperelle che Panny avrebbe dovuto mettere nella vasca?
- Quali accessori intercambiabili indossa Howard?
- Qual è il secondo nome della madre di Howard?
- Qual è il soprannome da astronauta di Howard?
- Cosa c'è sul parabrezza di Leonard nella 10x12?
- In quale stagione Penny taglia drasticamente i suoi capelli?
- Chi interpreta Beth Behrs nella serie?
- Leonard, con chi tradisce Priya?
- Quale parola ripete Sheldon quando fa uno scherzo?
- Su quale supereroe discutono le ragazze nella 6x13?
Down
- Cosa affitta Penny per farsi perdonare da Leonard nella 12x03?
- Come è Kitty nella celebre canzone di Sheldon?
- Come si chiama l'ex fidanzato di Penny nell'episodio pilota?
- Cosa devono cercare a coppie nella caccia al tesoro nella 7x03?
- Con chi si fidanza Stuart nell'ultima stagione?
- Qual è il nome del cane di Raj?
- In quale città si svolge la serie?
- Per chi è preoccupato Sheldon quando sbatte contro la porta di vetro nella 8x09?
- Come si chiama la ragazza di Raj dai gusti talvolta inquietanti?
- Sheldon cosa dice che sembra Amy appena la vede col vestito da sposa?
- Come si chiama il noto geologo della Caltech?
- Cosa usa Raj per riuscire a parlare con le donne?
26 Clues: Qual è il nome del cane di Raj? • Leonard, con chi tradisce Priya? • In quale città si svolge la serie? • Chi interpreta Beth Behrs nella serie? • Qual è il secondo nome della madre di Howard? • Qual è il soprannome da astronauta di Howard? • Come si chiama il noto geologo della Caltech? • Come è Kitty nella celebre canzone di Sheldon? • ...
The big bang theory 2024-09-01
Across
- Quale animale compromette la camera bianca?
- Cosa mette sotto al naso Amy per fingere di essere influenzata?
- Quale canzone devono suonare con la campane nel D&D natalizio?
- Qual è la specializzazione di Emily?
- Cosa affitta Penny per farsi perdonare da Leonard nella 12x03?
- In quale mare va a lavorare Leonard?
- Come si chiama l’inglese con cui esce Amy quando lascia Sheldon?
- Per colpa di chi Mary si picchia la mano sulla fronte?
- Quale cibo mangiano il venerdì sera?
- Qual è il giorno del bucato per Sheldon?
- Sheldon sparisce tutti i giorni alle 14 e …..
- Che tipo di medico è Beverly?
- Cosa fa cadere Bernadette per Howard quando lui è nello spazio?
- A quale animale la madre di Stuart paragonava il figlio?
- Chi è Riccardo Tentennante?
- Con chi si fidanza Stuart nell'ultima stagione?
- Quale degli ex di Penny si è comprato una barca?
- Fino a quando cercò le uova della caccia alle uova, Leonard?
- Chi è Tondelaia della Ventimiglia?
- Dove si trova fisicamente il telescopio guardato da Raj?
- Chi è Ilsa, personaggio del romanzo di Leonard?
- Quale serie tv vuole vedere Raj durante la simulazione nei locali caldaie della Caltech?
- Howard da cosa spera sia travestita Bernadette nella puntata di Disneyland?
- Toc toc toc, …….! X3
Down
- Cosa devono cercare a coppie nella caccia al tesoro nella 7x03?
- Quale costume indossa Sheldon pur di incontrare Stephen Hawking?
- Qual è il soprannome da astronauta di Howard?
- Con chi ha una “relazione” Raj nella 5x14?
- Come si chiama la ragazza di Raj dai gusti talvolta inquietanti?
- Quanti dollari è costato il dipinto che Amy ha fatto dipingere per Penny?
- Il campanello di chi vanno a suonare Sheldon e James Earl Jones?
- Sheldon cosa regala ad Amy nella 5x12?
- Cosa da la nonnina di Sheldon al pilota all’atterraggio?
- Come si chiama il barbiere di Sheldon? Signor...
- Cosa raffigura la chiavetta in cui Sheldon ha messo i bitcoin?
- Cosa deve passare Sheldon a Amy quando è indeciso tra XBOX ONE e PS4?
- Qual è il soprannome che Sheldon attribuisce alla madre di Amy?
- Con quale altro nome è conosciuto Georgie Cooper?
- Dove lavora Mary?
- Qual è il viaggio più lungo di Howard?
- Qual è il secondo nome della madre di Howard?
- Di quale stato è originaria la famiglia di Sheldon?
- Come sono le paperelle che Panny avrebbe dovuto mettere nella vasca?
- In quale stagione Penny taglia drasticamente i suoi capelli?
- Dove si danno il primo bacio Sheldon e Amy?
- A quale casa di Hogwarts appartiene Amy?
- Di chi è l’ufficio per cui si sfidano Sheldon e Barry?
- Chi canta al matrimonio di Sheldon e Amy?
- Di chi sparlano Penny e Beverly?
- Cosa uccide Lizard in “Carta, forbice, sasso, Lizard, Spock”?
- Per chi è preoccupato Sheldon quando sbatte contro la porta di vetro nella 8x09?
- Quanti figli ha la sorella di Sheldon?
- A chi salva la vita il Signor Koothrappali nella 8x11?
53 Clues: Dove lavora Mary? • Toc toc toc, …….! X3 • Chi è Riccardo Tentennante? • Che tipo di medico è Beverly? • Di chi sparlano Penny e Beverly? • Chi è Tondelaia della Ventimiglia? • Qual è la specializzazione di Emily? • In quale mare va a lavorare Leonard? • Quale cibo mangiano il venerdì sera? • Sheldon cosa regala ad Amy nella 5x12? • Qual è il viaggio più lungo di Howard? • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- When rivals match a price change.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- Has a first mover advantage
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
Down
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
ULIS-IBDP1-Subunit 2.4 Motivation and demotivation 2025-01-28
Across
- Involves asking employee to self-evaluate his or her job performance.
- Part of the theory that suggests that employees compare the ratio of their input (effort) to output (rewards).
- Non-cash forms of benefits that include company cars, free insurance and pension schemes, private health insurance, discounts on company products and low-interest rate loans.
- Theory that stated that three types of needs must be satisfied in order to boost morale one is need for achievement.
- Payment to a worker for each unit produced.
- Part of the theory that works on the assumption that people will choose to maximize pleasure and minimize pain. This means that people will behave in a way that results in the best outcome or reward.
- Theory that refers to a person’s ability to think and act independently as well as to self-manage when it comes to decision making.
- Summarized human needs in the form of a hierarchy.
- Is intended for new employees in order to help them acclimatize with the people, policies and processes of the organization.
Down
- Appraisal based on a range of formal, informal assessment methods to monitor employee progress, to provide support/guidance for improvement.
- Refers to the amount of people who leave an organization, expressed as a percentage of the workforce, per time period (usually one year).
- Motivation that comes from the satisfaction derived from working on and completing a task.
- Process that has three parts: identification, application and selection.
- Argued that in order to create any motivation in the workplace, it was essential to first remove the hygiene factors.
- Rate paid to a worker made for each hour worked
- Theory stated that humans were driven or motivated by money alone.
- Payment to a salesperson for each sale made.
- Appraisal whose goal is to measure level of employee’s success in meeting predetermined benchmarks.
18 Clues: Payment to a worker for each unit produced. • Payment to a salesperson for each sale made. • Rate paid to a worker made for each hour worked • Summarized human needs in the form of a hierarchy. • Theory stated that humans were driven or motivated by money alone. • Involves asking employee to self-evaluate his or her job performance. • ...
Copernican-Darwinian-Freudian Revolution 2025-02-03
Across
- Polish astronomer, proponent of Heliocentrism
- _______ of Alexandria, proponent of Geocentrism
- "Everyone has unconscious thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories that can be made conscious through this" t
- Also known as Freudian Slip
- species’ adaptations to their environments was proof of their “_________ design” by a creator.
- How individuals project feelings onto therapists
- Using logic to avoid emotional disstress
Down
- Theory of Natural _________,who survives and who does not
- _______ Church, a religious organization who banned Copernicus' books in 1616
- famous for his theory of evolution
- The center of the universe according to Philolaus
- the theory that human groups and races are subject to the samelaws of natural selection
- a heretic jailed by the Church for heliocentrism
- ______ reflect unconscious desires, thoughts, and motivations
- Austrian neurologist born in 1856
- The Origin of ______,marked the beginning of a new chapter in human intellectual history.
16 Clues: Also known as Freudian Slip • Austrian neurologist born in 1856 • famous for his theory of evolution • Using logic to avoid emotional disstress • Polish astronomer, proponent of Heliocentrism • _______ of Alexandria, proponent of Geocentrism • a heretic jailed by the Church for heliocentrism • How individuals project feelings onto therapists • ...
BioPsych Chapter 14 Crossword 2017-04-18
Across
- theory states that sleep occurs due to less sensory input. Give the D only.
- a CLOCK that regulates sleep are controlled by an internal timing mech. First C only.
- name of a mutated gene. OAT.
- happens in sleep where you stop breathing from time to time at night. A word only.
- brief periods of sleep like 2 or 3 seconds long.
- excessive sleep
- cessation of benzodiazepine therapy after chronic use. Craig David says it feels like.
- a Synthesis Theory basing on the observation of the brain during REM sending active signals to the Cerebral Cortex.
- a THEORY states that being awake disrupts the homeostasis of the body. Sleep is required.
- other term for sleep-talking.
- hallucinations that has dreamlike experiences during wakefulness.
- inability to move as one is falling asleep. P word only.
Down
- largest and slowest of EEG waves. 1-2hz. Give the D.
- stage where low voltage, high frequency but slower than of wakefulness. Before Stage 2.
- gene encodes a receptor protein that binds to a neuropeptide.
- a FUNCTION where cognitive abilities appears on the PreFrontal.
- effect of SLEEP when one is feeling groggy for several minutes. S word only.
- hormone synthesized from the N.T. Serotonin.
- a THEORY states that we sleep due to the internal 24hour Timing Mech.
- substance that adjust the timing of internal biological rhythms.
- a device or method used in measuring REM during REM
- recurring losses of muscle tone during wakefulness. flexible cat.
- example of a Zeitgebers. extreme tiredness due to flying too high.
- disorder where you fall asleep in inappropriate conditions.
- collective term of stages 3 and 4 in sleep. First S only.
25 Clues: excessive sleep • name of a mutated gene. OAT. • other term for sleep-talking. • hormone synthesized from the N.T. Serotonin. • brief periods of sleep like 2 or 3 seconds long. • a device or method used in measuring REM during REM • largest and slowest of EEG waves. 1-2hz. Give the D. • inability to move as one is falling asleep. P word only. • ...
Social/Moral/Emotional Theories Crossword, Ch 3. 2022-02-10
Across
- Takes place in children's zones of proximal development (Vygotsky's view of cognitive development).
- Stage III or Erikson's stages.
- Piaget first stage, another name for heteronomous morality.
- _______teachers are aware of the expected developmental characteristics of their students.
- ______ is an increasingly important role in a child's social and cognitive development.
- Also known as social and emotional development.
- Bronfenbrenner's model.
- ______'s stage theory of moral reasoning is an elaboration and refinement of Piaget's.
- Kohlberg's theory deals with moral reasoning rather than ___________.
- What age did Piaget find that children acknowledged the existence of rules?
Down
- ___ ranges represent the best times for a crisis to be resolved.
- # of Erikson's stages.
- Erikson's theory emphasizes the role of the _____.
- Piaget believes that cognitive abilities develop before _____ development.
- Level of Kohlberg's model that houses the "good-boy and good-girl" stage and "law and order" stage.
- Piaget- intentions are more important than the results of one's behavior.
- by 18-23 most individuals have developed a status of _______ achievement.
17 Clues: # of Erikson's stages. • Bronfenbrenner's model. • Stage III or Erikson's stages. • Also known as social and emotional development. • Erikson's theory emphasizes the role of the _____. • Piaget first stage, another name for heteronomous morality. • ___ ranges represent the best times for a crisis to be resolved. • ...
Motivation Theories 2022-03-04
Across
- human needs related to Maslow's third stage
- Taylor: is the prime motivator
- my theory: scientific approach based on observation
- wage based on as what the worker produces
- Herzberg: when present, these factors make the worker happy
- my theory: two factor theory (H & M)
Down
- human needs related to Maslow's fourth stage
- one of Herzberg's motivators; refers to a job that has more responsibility, pay
- Herzberg: if missing, these factors make workers unhappy
- Taylor's theory perfected to this style of factory work
- my theory: five stages of motivation
11 Clues: Taylor: is the prime motivator • my theory: five stages of motivation • my theory: two factor theory (H & M) • wage based on as what the worker produces • human needs related to Maslow's third stage • human needs related to Maslow's fourth stage • my theory: scientific approach based on observation • Taylor's theory perfected to this style of factory work • ...
Chapter 7 2024-01-05
Across
- punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed
- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- the theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- behavior that overconforms to social expectations
- deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- a person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- an undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- the theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior
Down
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- behavior that underconforms to accepted norms
- job-related crimes committed by high-status people
- a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- only occasional breaking of norms
- punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts
- the process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- an act committed in violation of the law
24 Clues: only occasional breaking of norms • an act committed in violation of the law • behavior that underconforms to accepted norms • ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior • behavior that overconforms to social expectations • behavior that departs from societal or group norms • ...
Social Identity Theory & Social Cognitive theory 2024-04-13
Across
- Bias in which members of an outgroup are perceived as more similar to each other than they really are.
- Prefix for the type of determinism in SCT that emphasizes the mutual influence between behavior and environment.
- A key mechanism in Bandura's theory where learning occurs by observing others - models.
- Term for a group to which a person psychologically identifies as being a member.
- One's belief in one's ability to successfully accomplish a task.
- In SCT, this is a necessary condition for learning through observation.
- ________ reinforcement occurs when the frequency of certain behaviours increases as a result of observing others rewarded for the same behaviours.
- A group that an individual does not belong to or identify with.
- The ability to remember what one has observed, crucial for learning in Bandura's theory.
- Learners must want to replicate the behaviour that they have observed.
Down
- The process of classifying others into groups.
- The process by which we incorporate the norms of our groups into our own self-concept.
- Experimental paradigm used by Tajfel to demonstrate even arbitrary group distinctions can lead to ingroup favoritism.
- This process in SIT explains how we differentiate our group from others.
- This theory emphasizes the importance of observing, modeling, and imitating the behaviors, attitudes, and emotional reactions of others; forerunner of SCT.
- Positive self-perception that can be enhanced by ingroup favoritism according to Tajfel.
- Central concept in Tajfel's theory relating to how individuals see themselves in social contexts.
- Learning method emphasized by Bandura, where individuals learn through watching others.
- To reproduce an observed behaviour, observers must physically and/or mentally be able to carry out the behaviour.
- Type of doll used in Bandura's experiment to demonstrate observational learning and aggression.
20 Clues: The process of classifying others into groups. • A group that an individual does not belong to or identify with. • One's belief in one's ability to successfully accomplish a task. • Learners must want to replicate the behaviour that they have observed. • In SCT, this is a necessary condition for learning through observation. • ...
Intellectual Revolution and Society 2022-03-30
Across
- the small amount of mental activity we know about
- describe the absolute perception of the universe with the Earth as it's center
- he created the law of gravitation
- he developed a compromise between the heliocentric and geocentric models of the universe
- he developed the theory of psychoanalysis
- he developed his own telescope and observed Venus
- Polish astronomer in the 16th century who created the theory about copernican revolution and the heliocentric model
- a scientific method of understanding inner and unconscious conflicts embedded within one’s personality, springing from free associations, dreams
- he is called the Father of Evolution
- he said that all planets move in elliptical orbits
- refers to the paradigm shift of how the Earth and Sun were placed in the universe
Down
- it is often described as survival of the fittest
- refers to series of events that led to the emergence of modern science and more
- things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried
- things we are unaware of and can not become aware of
- he introduced the geocentric model
- it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin
- the unconscious realm of higher morality
- Sun is the center of the Solar System having the Earth revolving around it
- fantasies of the individual
- this is the conscious self
21 Clues: this is the conscious self • fantasies of the individual • he created the law of gravitation • he introduced the geocentric model • he is called the Father of Evolution • the unconscious realm of higher morality • he developed the theory of psychoanalysis • it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin • it is often described as survival of the fittest • ...
Comparative Cultures 12: Unit 1 Sociology Quiz 2022-02-25
Across
- (2 words) A theory which understands society through social identifiers.
- Are your beliefs that define what is most important to you.
- Mass media used to unify culture, but has now _____________ society.
- _____________ theory: patterns of inequality in society produce social stability or social change.
- ____________ culture: ideas and beliefs which are passed down.
- _____________ try to come up with explanations and potential solutions for society
- _________ theory: gender inequality should be changed for the benefit of all members of society.
Down
- Male dominated society
- A large social grouping which is subject to dominant cultural expectations
- Theory: all aspects of a society—institutions, roles, norms, etc.—serve a purpose.
- Socially constructed idea of what it means to be a man or woman.
- _____________ culture: generally speaking is for entertaining rather than enrichment
- the study of the development, structure, and functioning of human society.
- the symbols, language, beliefs, values, and artifacts that are part of any society.
- Is descriptive, and based on observations that cannot be measured, such as language.
- Is information about quantities, and therefore numbers.
16 Clues: Male dominated society • Is information about quantities, and therefore numbers. • Are your beliefs that define what is most important to you. • ____________ culture: ideas and beliefs which are passed down. • Socially constructed idea of what it means to be a man or woman. • Mass media used to unify culture, but has now _____________ society. • ...
Chapter 5 crossword 2025-03-05
Across
- They are automatic spontaneous reaction to the world around us.
- A theory of emotion that views emotion as a reservoir that fills up and spills over; predicts that expressing an emotion will reduce arousal.
- An eating disorder characterized by the maintenance of unusually low body weight and a distorted body image.
- A reward that pulls an organism’s behavior in a particular direction.
- A reward that arises internally.
- A male hormone.
- An eating disorder characterized by bingeing, purging, and having feelings of depression, disgust, and lost control.
- A steady internal balance, or equilibrium.
- A reward from an outside source.
- A cultural norm that specifies when, where, and how a person should express an emotion.
- A desire to excel or outperform others.
Down
- Being associated with other people.
- A theory of emotion in which general arousal leads to assessment, which in turn leads to subjective feelings.
- A state of having fulfilled your potential.
- A theory of emotion that proposes that physical sensations lead to subjective feelings.
- A type of sugar that plays an important role in hunger levels.
- A hormone secreted by fat cells that helps the body maintain an appropriate level of stored fat.
- A theory of emotion featuring the simultaneous and independent occurrence of physical sensations and subjective feelings during an emotional experience.
- A state of tension and arousal triggered by cues important for survival.
- A process that arouses, maintains, and guides behavior toward a goal.
20 Clues: A male hormone. • A reward that arises internally. • A reward from an outside source. • Being associated with other people. • A desire to excel or outperform others. • A steady internal balance, or equilibrium. • A state of having fulfilled your potential. • A type of sugar that plays an important role in hunger levels. • ...
Watson's Theory of Caring 2017-07-16
Across
- determines what data will be collected, how it would be collected and by whom
- to be able to relate to how one is feeling
- includes observation of and identifying the problem; knowledge to build framework; formulation of hypothesis
- the natural world, as a whole or in a particular geographical area, especially as affected by human activity
- the strongest tool that establishes rapport and caring
- The absence of illness (or the presence of efforts that leads its absence)
- practice of caring to promote health with knowledge, proven science, education, nutrition, support and behavioral
- the needs for achievement, affiliation, intra & interpersonal need, self-actualization
- analysis of the data collected and the effects of any interventions
Down
- (2 words) a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self.
- placing the plan into action, including the collecting of the data
- Jean Watson’s Theory included 7 of these
- the needs of activity-inactivity, need for sexuality
- the psychology that studies human existence using phenomenological analysis
- the psychology that studies human existence using phenomenological analysis
- a human science of persons and human health-illness experiences that are mediated by professional, personal, scientific, esthetic and ethical human transactions as defined by Jean Watson
- the needs of food and fluid, elimination, ventilation
- the promotion and acceptance of the expressions of positive and negative feelings is one of the ______ factors
18 Clues: Jean Watson’s Theory included 7 of these • to be able to relate to how one is feeling • the needs of activity-inactivity, need for sexuality • the needs of food and fluid, elimination, ventilation • the strongest tool that establishes rapport and caring • placing the plan into action, including the collecting of the data • ...
COMPARATIVE POLICE SYSTEM CHALLENGE 2025-09-08
Across
- researcher visits another method
- A policing system where there is only one police force operating in a country
- Basic function of Criminal Justice that involves the rehabilitation of criminal offenders
- It emphasizes informal means of resolving disputes
- Basic function of Criminal Justice involves the rehabilitation of criminal offenders
- A theory in policing system where the yardstick of the efficiency of the police is determined by the number of arrests
- A policing system where police administrations and operations are independent from one state to another
- The accused is innocent until proven guilty
- This theory suggests that long with higher standards of living, victims become more careless of their belongings, and opportunities for committing crime multiply
Down
- It is a package of transnational flow of people, production, investment, information, ideas, and identity
- This theory the problem as society becoming too complex
- The accused is innocent until proven guilty
- The accused is guilty until proven innocent.
- A theory in policing system where the yardstick of police efficiency is the absence or lesser occurrence of crimes
- Basic function of Criminal Justice that involves detection, investigation of crime, and apprehension of offenders
- a combination of related elements that is functioning as a whole to achieve a single goal or objective
- researcher communicates with a foreign researcher
17 Clues: researcher visits another method • The accused is innocent until proven guilty • The accused is innocent until proven guilty • The accused is guilty until proven innocent. • researcher communicates with a foreign researcher • It emphasizes informal means of resolving disputes • This theory the problem as society becoming too complex • ...
Atoms & The Atomic Theory 2022-09-07
Across
- Particle with a positive electric charge
- Pathways around the nucleus electrons follow
- Atoms with different numbers of neutrons
- Greek philosopher that said all matter is made of tiny particles called "atomos" or atoms
- A 'fuzzy' region around the nucleus with electrons
- Particle with neutral electric charge
- Number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom
- the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom
- Discovered the nucleus
Down
- The positively charged center part of an atom
- Shows with electrons in circular orbits
- Changing one element to another
- Particle with a negative electric charge
- The joining of atomic nuclei
- A charged atom with too many or too few electrons
- A pure substance made of only one kind of atom
- Particles given off by unstable atoms
- Electrons on the outside energy shell
- Smallest piece of an element
- The splitting of an atomic nucleus
20 Clues: Discovered the nucleus • The joining of atomic nuclei • Smallest piece of an element • Changing one element to another • The splitting of an atomic nucleus • Particle with neutral electric charge • Particles given off by unstable atoms • Electrons on the outside energy shell • Shows with electrons in circular orbits • Particle with a positive electric charge • ...
The Big Bang Theory 2024-05-02
Across
- Scientific effect that Sheldon dresses up on for Penny’s Halloween party
- Instrument Amy plays
- Sheldon’s middle name
- Type of engineer Howard is
- Silly astronaut name for Howard
- Leonard’s failed bachelor party destination
- Small space object Howard’s daughter is named after
- Animal stolen from Sheldon’s World of Warcraft account
- Birthday partner with Hallee Wolowitz
Down
- Unseen, loud-mouth character
- Leonard, Howard, and Raj’s team name for “The Physics Bowl”
- Movie premiering the night Amy and Sheldon consummate
- Raj’s furbaby
- “Rock, paper, scissors, ______, Spock!”
- Raj’s ex whose breakup allowed him to speak to women sober
- Tam’s homeland
- Alma Mater for Leonard
- Coveted comic con city
- Who first sings “Soft Kitty”
- Who says, “I like all kinds of music, but my favorite genre is free”
20 Clues: Raj’s furbaby • Tam’s homeland • Instrument Amy plays • Sheldon’s middle name • Alma Mater for Leonard • Coveted comic con city • Type of engineer Howard is • Unseen, loud-mouth character • Who first sings “Soft Kitty” • Silly astronaut name for Howard • Birthday partner with Hallee Wolowitz • “Rock, paper, scissors, ______, Spock!” • Leonard’s failed bachelor party destination • ...
History of Atomic Theory 2014-11-03
Across
- Thomson's model was called the __ pudding model.
- The philosopher who said all matter is 5 elements.
- The name for atoms that Democritus came up with.
- The scientist who showed electrons moved in fixed orbits.
- Along with Heisneberg, he made the cloud model.
- The cloud model helps explain why atoms act like a __ even though they are mostly empty space.
- Rutherford showed atoms had a nucleus by shooting gold __ with radiation.
- According to Dalton, atoms cannot be created or __.
- This famous scientist showed evidence for atoms in the 1700's.
Down
- The part of the atom that Rutherford discovered.
- Rutherford's model of the atom is the __ model.
- The philosopher who helped Democritus
- The first scientist to split an atom.
- The scientist who discovered the electron.
- Bohr's model helped explain why atoms formed __.
- The scientist who came up with the first atomic theory.
- People believed Aristotle for about __ thousand years.
17 Clues: The philosopher who helped Democritus • The first scientist to split an atom. • The scientist who discovered the electron. • Rutherford's model of the atom is the __ model. • Along with Heisneberg, he made the cloud model. • The part of the atom that Rutherford discovered. • Thomson's model was called the __ pudding model. • ...
Chapter 2 Vocbulary 2017-03-08
Across
- very weak
- situated on the edge
- common center as circles or spheres
- originality of invention
- relating to the telegraph
- part attached to something
- Study of literary text
- not mutable
- state of being plastic
Down
- capable of being extended
- make or become accustomed
- theory and opinions based on reason
- showing attention to detail
- ability of the brain to form
- doctrine that events determined by causes external to the will
- rejection of all religions
- theory that all knowledge is from sense experience
17 Clues: very weak • not mutable • situated on the edge • Study of literary text • state of being plastic • originality of invention • capable of being extended • make or become accustomed • relating to the telegraph • rejection of all religions • part attached to something • showing attention to detail • ability of the brain to form • theory and opinions based on reason • ...
Scientific Revolution 2014-11-12
Across
- science as a multiple-step process
- reason, not tradition, is the source of all knowledge
- study of the stars
- the theory that the heavier the object the faster it falls
- the theory that the sun is in the center of the universe and all heavenly bodies circle around it excluding Earth
- man who argued for experimental methodology
- the scientific revolution ended with this man
- 2nd century CE Greek astronomer, mathematician, and geographer
Down
- the belief that experience is the only source of knowledge
- transforming metal to gold
- wrote then"Commentariolus"
- last name of man who was known as the father of rationalism
- the theory that the earth is in the center of the universe and all heavenly bodies circle around it
- man who founded empiricism
- 4th century BCE Greek philosopher and scientist
15 Clues: study of the stars • transforming metal to gold • wrote then"Commentariolus" • man who founded empiricism • science as a multiple-step process • man who argued for experimental methodology • the scientific revolution ended with this man • 4th century BCE Greek philosopher and scientist • reason, not tradition, is the source of all knowledge • ...
Evolution 2022-02-18
Across
- Proposed that organisms evolved toward complexity and perfection.
- Created the theory of catastrophism
- Traces of organisms from the past.
- The theory that all of Earth's processes are uniform throughout time.
- Proposed the theory of gradualism
Down
- States that natural disasters such as floods and volcanic eruptions have happened often during Earth's long history.
- A principle that states that the changes in landforms resulted from slow changes over a long period of time.
- Proposed the theory of uniformitarianism
- The difference of an individual to other individuals in a group
- First person to write about the theory of Evolution.
10 Clues: Proposed the theory of gradualism • Traces of organisms from the past. • Created the theory of catastrophism • Proposed the theory of uniformitarianism • First person to write about the theory of Evolution. • The difference of an individual to other individuals in a group • Proposed that organisms evolved toward complexity and perfection. • ...
All about Cells ! 2014-11-29
Across
- theory is a scientific theory which describes the properties of cells
- the things that make organisms what they are
- a space or vesicle within the cytoplasm of a cell, enclosed by a membrane and typically containing fluid
- solution that has a lower osmotic pressure than another solution
- he readily stainable substance of a cell nucleus, consisting of DNA, RNA, and various proteins, that forms chromosomes during cell division
- the cell substance between the cell membrane and the nucleus, containing the cytosol, organelles, cytoskeleton, and various particles
- a small dense spherical structure in the nucleus of a cell during interphase
- a small set of microtubules arranged in a specific way. There are nine groups of microtubules
- the smallest structural and functional unit of an organism, typically microscopic and consisting of cytoplasm and a nucleus enclosed in a membrane. Microscopic organisms typically consist of a single cell, which is either eukaryotic or prokaryotic.
Down
- a membrane-enclosed organelle found in eukaryotic cells
- a membrane-bound compartment inside chloroplasts and cyanobacteria
- a higher concentration of solutes outside the cell than inside the cell
- any of various specific protein molecules in surface membranes of cells and organelles to which complementary molecules, as hormones, neurotransmitters, antigens, or antibodies, may become bound
- any of a number of organized or specialized structures within a living cell
- an organelle in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells containing degradative enzymes enclosed in a membrane
- the movement of molecules from a high concentration to a low concentration
- the movement of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane from higher water concentration to a lower water concentration
- a small organelle within a cell, consisting of fluid enclosed by a lipid bilayer membrane
- wall a rigid layer of polysaccharides lying outside the plasma membrane of the cells of plants, fungi, and bacteria. In the algae and higher plants, it consists mainly of cellulose
- cell theory is a scientific theory which describes the properties of cells
20 Clues: the things that make organisms what they are • a membrane-enclosed organelle found in eukaryotic cells • solution that has a lower osmotic pressure than another solution • a membrane-bound compartment inside chloroplasts and cyanobacteria • theory is a scientific theory which describes the properties of cells • ...
Know Your Psychology Terms! 2013-05-31
Across
- Instinctive component of personality ruled by the pleasure principle
- The group that one does not belong to or identify with
- Drug that relieves pain such as morphine or heroin.
- The center of emotion, particularly fear.
- Putting group goals ahead of individual goals.
- Device that monitors electrical activity of the brain by recording electrodes on the scalp.
- Physical and emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and lowered self-efficacy.
- The phobic disorder where one is afraid of storms.
- Drugs that increase CNS activation.
- Route of persuasion that does not create a lasting effect
- A release of emotional tension.
- The psychologist who created the hierarchy of needs.
- principle class of gonadal hormones in females.
Down
- A mood disorder characterized by emotional extremes at both periods of depression or mania.
- Personality disorder characterized as a person who is overly-dramatic and exaggerates often.
- Stressors that have a short duration and clear endpoint
- The phobic disorder where one is afraid of going into public.
- Awareness of internal and external stimuli.
- The psychologist who created the rational emotive theory.
- Investment Theory Theory made by Robert Trivers.
- Tendency to expect good outcomes.
- A personality disorder characterized by allowing others to make your decisions.
- Sleep of rapid eye movements and vivid dreaming.
- Internal state of tension.
24 Clues: Internal state of tension. • A release of emotional tension. • Tendency to expect good outcomes. • Drugs that increase CNS activation. • The center of emotion, particularly fear. • Awareness of internal and external stimuli. • Putting group goals ahead of individual goals. • principle class of gonadal hormones in females. • Investment Theory Theory made by Robert Trivers. • ...
Chapter 7 Vocabulary Crossword Puzzle 2016-03-09
Across
- The theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society.
- Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms.
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts.
- Job related crimes committed by high status people.
- An act committed in violation of the law.
- Behavior that overconforms to social expectations.
- The theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed.
- A social condition which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent.
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts.
- The theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant.
- Rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms.
- The theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them.
- Deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual's identity.
- Only occasional breaking of norms.
Down
- The process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization.
- A method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison.
- The process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that. Injure people of lower status.
- Behavior that underconforms to accepted norms.
- A system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statuses.
- A person who breaks significant societal or group norms.
- Behavior that departs from societal or group norms.
- A undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance.
- A repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior.
- Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment.
24 Clues: Only occasional breaking of norms. • An act committed in violation of the law. • Behavior that underconforms to accepted norms. • Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms. • A repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior. • Behavior that overconforms to social expectations. • Job related crimes committed by high status people. • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- When rivals match a price change.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- Has a first mover advantage
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
Down
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
Down
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- Has a first mover advantage
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- When rivals match a price change.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
Chapter 9 2022-05-03
Across
- When rivals match a price change.
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Has a first mover advantage
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
Down
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
Chapter 7 2023-01-12
Across
- ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms in which they are exposed to
- a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- an undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts.
- an act committed in violation of the law
- the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- the theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- a person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior
- the process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- job-related crimes committed by high-status people
Down
- only occasional breaking of norms
- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- behavior that departs from the societal or group norm
- the theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- behavior that underconforms to accepted norms
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- behavior that overconforms to social expectations
24 Clues: only occasional breaking of norms • an act committed in violation of the law • behavior that underconforms to accepted norms • ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior • behavior that overconforms to social expectations • job-related crimes committed by high-status people • ...
Chapter 7 2023-01-12
Across
- ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms in which they are exposed to
- a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- an undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts.
- an act committed in violation of the law
- the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- the theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- a person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior
- the process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- job-related crimes committed by high-status people
Down
- only occasional breaking of norms
- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- behavior that departs from the societal or group norm
- the theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- behavior that underconforms to accepted norms
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- behavior that overconforms to social expectations
24 Clues: only occasional breaking of norms • an act committed in violation of the law • behavior that underconforms to accepted norms • ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior • behavior that overconforms to social expectations • job-related crimes committed by high-status people • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2023-11-28
Across
- Psychiatric nurse that believed in the use of therapuetic relationships between nurses and patients.
- Accepted as truth and represent the values and beliefs of the theory or concepts framework.
- Who described about 5 levels of nursing experience from novice to expert?
- Freudian stage of full sexual maturity.
- Pattern of shared understandings and assumptions about reality and the world.
- the lady with the lamp.
- She is the mind behind the "nursing process theory."
- Intimacy vs. ______
- a change through which a new wholeness is formed of the life of the human being has lost his suffering
- A set of interrelated concepts that provides a systematic view of a phenomenon.
Down
- It is in this stage where each problem is given a specific goal or outcome, and each goal or outcome is given nursing interventions to help achieve the goal.
- The process which involves finding a method of making it possible for people to let go of an old pattern that was somehow counterproductive.
- Refers to the act that occurs when the nurse welcomes the patient to the caring communion
- The moment when the nurse and another person come together in such a way that an occasion for human caring is created
- Its function is control or mastery of an aspect of self or environment to some standard of excellence.
- Means love and charity, eros and agape (unconditional love) are united, and caritas is by nature unconditional love.
- A state of self-awareness with conscious selection of behaviors that is optimal for the individual.
- Internal and external surroundings that affect a client.
- A graphic or symbolic representation of a phenomenon not directly observable, which allows the reader to visualize key constructs and their interrelationships.
- Constitutes one of the basic concepts of caritative caring ethics
- Global concepts identifying a discipline’s phenomena of interest.
- Type of theory that articulates a broad range of the significant relationships among the concepts of a discipline.
22 Clues: Intimacy vs. ______ • the lady with the lamp. • Freudian stage of full sexual maturity. • She is the mind behind the "nursing process theory." • Internal and external surroundings that affect a client. • Constitutes one of the basic concepts of caritative caring ethics • Global concepts identifying a discipline’s phenomena of interest. • ...
Intellectual Revolution and Society 2022-03-30
Across
- a scientific method of understanding inner and unconscious conflicts embedded within one’s personality, springing from free associations, dreams and fantasies of the individual
- he developed a compromise between the heliocentric and geocentric models of the universe
- refers to series of events that led to the emergence of modern science and more
- things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried
- it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin
- the small amount of mental activity we know about
- he developed the theory of psychoanalysis
- he said that all planets move in elliptical orbits
- he introduced the geocentric model
- Sun is the center of the Solar System having the Earth revolving around it
Down
- refers to the paradigm shift of how the Earth and Sun were placed in the universe
- Polish astronomer in the 16th century who created the theory about copernican revolution and the heliocentric model
- it is often described as survival of the fittest
- he developed his own telescope and observed Venus
- describe the absolute perception of the universe with the Earth as it's center
- things we are unaware of and can not become aware of
- he is called the Father of Evolution
- this is the conscious self
- he created the law of gravitation
- the unconscious realm of higher morality
20 Clues: this is the conscious self • he created the law of gravitation • he introduced the geocentric model • he is called the Father of Evolution • the unconscious realm of higher morality • he developed the theory of psychoanalysis • it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin • it is often described as survival of the fittest • ...
Developmental Psychology 2024-05-09
Across
- agents, such as chemicals and viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm
- in Piaget’s theory, the state of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts
- in Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 6 or 7 to 11 years of age) during which children gain the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events
- our sense of self; according to Erikson, adolescents solidify a sense of self by testing and integrating various roles
- an emotional tie with another person; shown in young children by their seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation
- in Piaget’s theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities
- Swiss psychologist most famous for his theories on cognitive development in children
Down
- the awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived
- a branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span
- the principle (which Piaget believed to be a part of concrete operational reasoning) that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects
- psychologist best known for his maternal-separation, dependency needs, and social isolation experiments on rhesus monkeys which manifested the importance of caregiving and companionship to social and cognitive development
- physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a pregnant woman’s heavy drinking; in severe cases, signs signs include a small, out-of-proportion head and abnormal facial features
- in Piaget’s theory, the preoperational child’s difficulty taking another’s point of view
- in Piaget’s theory, the stage (from about 2 to about 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic
- psychologist who is most recognized for the stages of moral development which identify the development of moral reasoning and ethical behavior in humans
- developmental psychologist known for his 8-stage theory on psychological development of human beings
16 Clues: the awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived • Swiss psychologist most famous for his theories on cognitive development in children • in Piaget’s theory, the preoperational child’s difficulty taking another’s point of view • a branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span • ...
Field Law Holiday Crossword 2017-12-08
Across
- Field’s resident “drummer”
- Bill Hopkins’ title
- Former kindergarten teacher
- Anthony’s little bundle of joy
- Janine is new to this department
- Nicole Hamilton’s 2017 Halloween costume
- Most recent marriage
- Continent of Peter Collins’ most recent sabbatical
- Original Games Master
- original crossword maker
- This person is at the Jay-Z concert tonight [tickets were bought before party was scheduled, don’t worry]
- Name of Steve’s pink guitar
- Name this Kathol
- The only Field boardroom named after a staff member
Down
- Air Force Engineer
- Mountain Doreen climbed this summer
- Sits under a leaf
- Number of years Maureen has worked at the firm
- Eden and Leane’s “Pet” Charity
- Nickname is “Queenie”
- Catriona and Simone have this in common
- Name of new Calgary building
- Hung his painting in the Barclay lobby
- Name of this cool cat
- Faralee’s last travel location
- Firm limerick master
- Spice of Miles Atkinson’s life
- Staff member with new twin kittens
- Has a painting of a train in their office
29 Clues: Name this Kathol • Sits under a leaf • Air Force Engineer • Bill Hopkins’ title • Most recent marriage • Firm limerick master • Nickname is “Queenie” • Name of this cool cat • Original Games Master • original crossword maker • Field’s resident “drummer” • Former kindergarten teacher • Name of Steve’s pink guitar • Name of new Calgary building • Anthony’s little bundle of joy • ...
Earth science 2024-08-14
Across
- What term encompasses all scientific disciplines related to the study of Earth, including geology and meteorology?
- What concept describes a universe that remains unchanged over time?
- Which branch of science focuses on celestial objects and the universe as a whole?
- What type of theory describes the rapid expansion of the universe from an extremely hot and dense initial state?
- What is the scientific study of weather and atmospheric conditions?
- What large body of saltwater covers most of the Earth's surface?
- What theory suggests that the universe began from a very dense and hot state and has been expanding ever since?
Down
- Who is known for developing the theory of relativity and has made significant contributions to our understanding of physics?
- What early model of the universe proposed a primordial state from which the universe expanded?
- What layer of gases surrounds the Earth and is crucial for supporting life?
- What term describes the layer of Earth consisting of all its water bodies, including oceans, rivers, and lakes?
- What is the force that acts between charged particles and is fundamental to electromagnetism?
- What system includes all the living organisms on Earth and their interactions with the environment?
- What theory proposes the existence of multiple, potentially infinite, universes?
- What remains or traces of ancient organisms are used to study past life on Earth?
- Which physicist is renowned for his laws of motion and universal gravitation?
- What term refers to the solid part of the Earth, including the crust and upper mantle?
- What fundamental force attracts objects toward the center of the Earth and is responsible for weight?
- What is the study of oceans and their phenomena, including marine life and ocean currents?
- What field of science involves the study of the Earth's physical structure and substances?
20 Clues: What large body of saltwater covers most of the Earth's surface? • What concept describes a universe that remains unchanged over time? • What is the scientific study of weather and atmospheric conditions? • What layer of gases surrounds the Earth and is crucial for supporting life? • Which physicist is renowned for his laws of motion and universal gravitation? • ...
natural selection 2021-11-19
12 Clues: death • lizards • giraffe • invisible • down syndrome • a kind or sort • genetically determined • If an environment changes • the theory behind giraffes neck • Continuous or discontinuous variation • theory of evolution by natural selection • group of linked ideas to explain something
GTY 154 Test #1 Review 2021-09-18
Across
- People in the population who are 100 years or older
- Area of the world with exceptional longevity
- The __________ ratio is a way to compare portions of the population based on employment.
- A longer lifespan free of any major illness until the last few years is a characteristic of _______
- When older people are treated unequally (directly or indirectly) on grounds of their age
- How long people could live if environmental hazards were eliminated is _____ life span
- Type of study where researchers introduce an intervention and study the effects
- An age-population ratio of those typically not in the labor force and those typically in the labor force
- Variable that represents inputs or causes
- By what measure did the number of foreign-born U.S. residents change between 1990 and 2010?
Down
- Theory that older adults want to be seen as valuable to others
- Variable that represents Manipulated measure in a study
- Theory that focuses on understanding the meanings that people give to their social lives
- Study of populations, trends, and population characteristics
- Tool visually captures population changes?
- Theory emphasizing older adult’s attempt to preserve and maintain existing structures
- Alfred, an African American man, lives to 85, while Tom, a white man, lives to 64 is an example of a(n) _____
- Theory emphasizing withdrawal or separation from past roles and activities
- The age to be eligible to vote is an example of an important ______ age
- Study of aging
- Early gerontological theories were focused on the ______ while newer developments emphasize societal impacts
- A health care analyst presents some statistics to a committee. He expresses concern that there will soon be 35 older adults for every 100 working adults. The analyst is referring to a __________ ratio.
- Categorizations, such as race, gender, age that are so automatic that they are termed _____ categories
23 Clues: Study of aging • Variable that represents inputs or causes • Tool visually captures population changes? • Area of the world with exceptional longevity • People in the population who are 100 years or older • Variable that represents Manipulated measure in a study • Study of populations, trends, and population characteristics • ...
Preschool and Theories Review 2016-09-08
Across
- Period in Piaget's Theory in which children organize information to form a concept
- Relates to physical movement
- Grouping objects by common trait
- Period in Piaget's Theory in which children think logically and abstractly
- Intelligence that relates to relating to other people
- The ability to focus on only one quality at a time
- Base of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
- Purpose of this school is to train future teachers
- Grouping items in order by size or number
- Deals with reasoning and numbers
- Stage in Piaget's Theory in which infants use their surroundings to learn and explore their surroundings
Down
- Goal of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
- Intelligence that relates well to the natural environment
- Understanding that an objects physical properties stay the same even when the appearance changes
- Multiple Intelligence that relates to words
- Period in Piaget's Theory in which there are significant leaps in logical thinking
- Relies on the sense of sight
- Intelligence that is good at remembering melodies and mimicking beats
- Intelligence relating to self reflection
- Parents are part owners and administrators in this school
- Areas of a classroom clearly defined and equipped for specific activities
- Type of question that encourages children to verbally express themselves
- Italian educator who created schools with self correcting materials
- These classes are designed for parents to interact with their baby
- A federally funded preschool for 3 and 4 year olds from low income families
25 Clues: Relates to physical movement • Relies on the sense of sight • Grouping objects by common trait • Deals with reasoning and numbers • Goal of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs • Base of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs • Intelligence relating to self reflection • Grouping items in order by size or number • Multiple Intelligence that relates to words • ...
Evolutionary Process 2020-07-04
Across
- The tailbone of humans is a _______ structure
- He disproved the theory of spontaneous generation
- Amphibians are the ancestors of reptiles. What is the name give to the gradual process of change of organisms over time?
- The theory which talks about aliens bringing life to earth
- The theory that is widely used to explain the origin of earth.
- A fish which is named as a living fossil
- the element used to determine age of fossils
- The closest ancestors of birds and mammals
Down
- The evolving of novel species from older species.
- Paleontology is the study of ______
- The type of rocks in the crust of earth
- What happens to a species of organisms when they cannot adopt to a certain environment?
- Father of evolution.
- Where did the first pre-cell originate?
- A gas which was abundant in the early atmosphere
15 Clues: Father of evolution. • Paleontology is the study of ______ • The type of rocks in the crust of earth • Where did the first pre-cell originate? • A fish which is named as a living fossil • The closest ancestors of birds and mammals • the element used to determine age of fossils • The tailbone of humans is a _______ structure • ...
Evolution Crossword 2022-10-06
Across
- Body parts that are structurally similar in related species
- Change in the genetic material of a cell
- The millions of fossils that scientists collected
- A structure that is reduced in size and has little or no function
- His idea of evolution was WRONG
- A trait or novel process that helps an organism survive and reproduce
- A well-tested concept that explains a wide range of observations
- Diagram of the relationship between the species
Down
- The theory that species evolve during short periods of rapid change
- The scientist who came up with the theory of evolution
- Survive if better adapted to environment
- The theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily
- The gradual change in species over time
- A difference between individuals of the same species
- The last shared common ancestor on the branching tree of evolution
15 Clues: His idea of evolution was WRONG • The gradual change in species over time • Change in the genetic material of a cell • Survive if better adapted to environment • Diagram of the relationship between the species • The millions of fossils that scientists collected • The theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily • A difference between individuals of the same species • ...
GRADE 8 - CROSSWORD - 27.06.2021 2021-06-22
Across
- Discovery of benzene and electromagnetic induction
- Proposed the theory of evolution
- Invented Zinc-carbon battery
- Father of modern botany
- Discovered the fundamental laws of inheritance
- Discovery of DNA structure
- Discovery of neutron
- Discovery of the electron
Down
- Discovery of Phosphorus
- Father of biology
- Discovery of gravitational force
- General Theory of Relativity
- Discovered alpha and beta rays
- Discovery of Polonium and Radium
- Invention of motion picture camera
15 Clues: Father of biology • Discovery of neutron • Discovery of Phosphorus • Father of modern botany • Discovery of the electron • Discovery of DNA structure • Invented Zinc-carbon battery • General Theory of Relativity • Discovered alpha and beta rays • Proposed the theory of evolution • Discovery of gravitational force • Discovery of Polonium and Radium • Invention of motion picture camera • ...
oligopoly 2022-05-05
Across
- When rivals match a price change.
- Firms output decision has no effect on rivals out put decision.
- There are relatively few large firms in an industry.
- A market in which all firms have access to same technology, consumers respond quickly to changes, and there is no sunk cost.
- When rivals do not match a price change.
- If in sweezy oligopoly they match the price, in cournot oligopoly they match the ___ produced.
- Defines as the response of profit-maximizing level of output for a firm given output levels of the other firms.
- Has a first mover advantage
- In an oligopoly, firms can benefit at the expense of consumer by agreeing to restrict output or equivalently, to charge higher prices.
- Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms.
- Has been criticized because it offers no explanation of how the industry settles on initial price P0 that generates the kink in each firm's demand curve. It is also the best tool for pricing decision.
- In a sweezy oligopoly this will be match by rivals if it is decrease and will not be match if it is increase.
Down
- A function that defines combination of outputs produced by firms that yield a given firm the same level of profits.
- Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms.
- Follows the leader and maximizes profit given the output produced by the leader.
- Bertrand oligopoly and __ products leads to zero economic profit and there is no deadweight loss.
- The type of oligopoly that assumes the firms sell identical products and that consumers are willing to pay the monopoly price for the good.
- A situation where a firms change of its output doesn't affect the rivals output.
- Firms differ with respect to when they make decisions, a single firm chooses an output before their rivals select their output.
- Two firms create a oligopoly.
20 Clues: Has a first mover advantage • Two firms create a oligopoly. • When rivals match a price change. • When rivals do not match a price change. • There are relatively few large firms in an industry. • Products in an oligopoly are similar from each firms. • Products in an oligopoly are different from each firms. • ...
Medicine Through Time Mega Crossword 2019-12-17
Across
- Fifth century BC healer whose name means “Horsepower”
- Antiseptic developed by Joseph Lister
- Discoverers of the helix structure of DNA
- Devastating sickness that struck London in 1665
- This person served in the Crimean War and redesigned hospital care
- This man discovered that the heart was a blood pump
- Colourful document used by medieval doctors to diagnose disease
- This sickness wiped out a third of the population in the 14th century
- Religious men who provided hospital care in the Middle Ages
- This treatment suggested that keeping a sheep in your bedroom could cure you
- Theory of disease created by Louis Pasteur
- A hospital for those with infectious diseases
Down
- Public health organisation created in 1948
- Ancient medical theory concerned with balancing the body’s natural fluids
- In the middle ages they believed he was responsible for disease
- This man designed and built London’s sewers
- A beak-wearing medical professional of the 17th century
- This theory suggested disease was created by bad odours
- He proved the connection between water and cholera. He may also be a character from “Game of Thrones”.
- The first real Magic Bullet
20 Clues: The first real Magic Bullet • Antiseptic developed by Joseph Lister • Discoverers of the helix structure of DNA • Public health organisation created in 1948 • Theory of disease created by Louis Pasteur • This man designed and built London’s sewers • A hospital for those with infectious diseases • Devastating sickness that struck London in 1665 • ...
Sleep and dreams by cole 2024-04-30
Across
- A dream in which the sleeper is aware they are dreaming
- The waves created while relaxed or tired
- A jerk like muscular twitch that occurs when a person is falling asleep
- Theory that sleep evolved as an adaptive mechanism to help us survive the night time
- The waves created while fully awake
- Theory that sleeping serves the function of repairing and restoring the body
- A state of sleep characterized by three stages of sleep
- The content of the dream that is remembered or recounted
- During REM sleep your muscles are suppressed in function due to what
Down
- A sleep study involving a series of tests performed during sleep
- The content Freud believed that dreams had hidden meanings
- One of the most common dreams
- Physiological changes that repeat at about 24-hour intervals
- Theory that while sleeping our brains process information from our day
- The waves created in the first stage of sleep
- A dream arousing feelings of intense fear and distress
- The waves created in the third through fourth stages of sleep
- A series of images, ideas, and emotions that occur during sleep
- The stage of sleep in which you dream
- A disturbance in sleep induced by a major shift in environmental time zones
20 Clues: One of the most common dreams • The waves created while fully awake • The stage of sleep in which you dream • The waves created while relaxed or tired • The waves created in the first stage of sleep • A dream arousing feelings of intense fear and distress • A dream in which the sleeper is aware they are dreaming • A state of sleep characterized by three stages of sleep • ...
Learning Check 6 2025-04-01
Across
- When a crisis passes, the ___ division of your ANS takes over
- ___ from the facial muscles to the brain plays a key role in determining the nature and intensity of emotions
- Theory emphasizing autonomy and competence (Hyphen after 4 letters)
- States of internal tension reducing homeostasis
- Evaluating stimuli to determine emotional response
- The physiological aim of drive reduction is___
- Emotions are the feeling aspect of _____
Down
- Cannon-Bard theory proposed that the __ experience of emotion and physiological arousal do not cause one another
- Skin conductance occurs more in disgust than in___
- Brain structure linked to fear and pleasure
- One of the cranial nerves in emotional processing
- Physiological, psychological, and social requirements
- A complex behaviour that is unlearned
- Shame with a positive connotation
- ___display rules dictate when and how particular emotions are to be expressed
- McCleland and ___ proposed the achievement goal theory
16 Clues: Shame with a positive connotation • A complex behaviour that is unlearned • Emotions are the feeling aspect of _____ • Brain structure linked to fear and pleasure • The physiological aim of drive reduction is___ • States of internal tension reducing homeostasis • One of the cranial nerves in emotional processing • Skin conductance occurs more in disgust than in___ • ...
Parts of the cell Krish 2022-12-01
Across
- package hormone in cell
- wall outside the cell membrane
- Powerhouse of a cell
- contains dna
- stores stuff in the cell
- organs in the cell
- membrane surrounding the cytoplasm
- Exception to the cell theory
Down
- singled cell living organism
- Gets rid of cell theory
- has ribosomes attached
- folded prat of mitchocandra
- synthesize amino acid back into protein
- spread of particles from high to low
- basic unit of function
- structure in a cell that contains chromosomes
16 Clues: contains dna • organs in the cell • Powerhouse of a cell • has ribosomes attached • basic unit of function • Gets rid of cell theory • package hormone in cell • stores stuff in the cell • folded prat of mitchocandra • singled cell living organism • Exception to the cell theory • wall outside the cell membrane • membrane surrounding the cytoplasm • spread of particles from high to low • ...
Theories of Motivation (Chaper 5) 2014-03-26
Across
- / Hull's theory of motivation is _____ theory
- / Hull belived that motivation was driven by _________ needs
- / Related to drive theory is ___________ Theory
- / The _______ level of the 3M model consists of the our dispositions we form as a child
- / The grade that we deserve is a ____________
- / The founder of the 3M model of motivation
- / Ryan and Deci beleived that motivation was to satisfy ______ needs
- / The need for belonging and social interaction is often known as
Down
- / Product ___________ is related to the level of interest in a product
- / According to Mazlow, we must satisfy what needs before anything else
- / Maslow invented the hierarchy of what?
11 Clues: / Maslow invented the hierarchy of what? • / The founder of the 3M model of motivation • / Hull's theory of motivation is _____ theory • / The grade that we deserve is a ____________ • / Related to drive theory is ___________ Theory • / Hull belived that motivation was driven by _________ needs • / The need for belonging and social interaction is often known as • ...
Intellectual Revolution and Society 2022-03-30
Across
- he developed a compromise between the heliocentric and geocentric models of the universe
- a scientific method of understanding inner and unconscious conflicts embedded within one’s personality, springing from free associations, dreams
- describe the absolute perception of the universe with the Earth as it's center
- he is called the Father of Evolution
- he created the law of gravitation
- the small amount of mental activity we know about
- it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin
- refers to series of events that led to the emergence of modern science and more
- things we are unaware of and can not become aware of
- SELECTION it is often described as survival of the fittest
- fantasies of the individual
- he developed the theory of psychoanalysis
Down
- refers to the paradigm shift of how the Earth and Sun were placed in the universe
- things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried
- this is the conscious self
- he introduced the geocentric model
- Polish astronomer in the 16th century who created the theory about copernican revolution and the heliocentric model
- he said that all planets move in elliptical orbits
- the unconscious realm of higher morality
- he developed his own telescope and observed Venus
- Sun is the center of the Solar System having the Earth revolving around it
21 Clues: this is the conscious self • fantasies of the individual • he created the law of gravitation • he introduced the geocentric model • he is called the Father of Evolution • the unconscious realm of higher morality • he developed the theory of psychoanalysis • it is the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin • things we could be aware of if we wanted or tried • ...
So that was medieval medicine.. 2023-07-18
Across
- This humour was associated with winter
- The name of a plague that resulted in large boils appearing on the body
- This chart was used by physicians to see if a patient was ill
- This disease struck in 1348
- This was a supernatural cause of disease
- Bad air
- Another name for a doctor
- According to the Theory of the Four Humours the humours for you to be healthy must be.
Down
- Another name for the Black Death
- They cut hair and removed teeth
- This treatment was based on the four humours
- Came up with the Theory of the Opposites
- The Father of medicine. Came up with the Theory of the Four Humours
- The percentage of hospitals who catered for the sick
14 Clues: Bad air • Another name for a doctor • This disease struck in 1348 • They cut hair and removed teeth • Another name for the Black Death • This humour was associated with winter • Came up with the Theory of the Opposites • This was a supernatural cause of disease • This treatment was based on the four humours • The percentage of hospitals who catered for the sick • ...
financial system 2025-05-22
Across
- A decentralized global market for trading currencies
- A marketplace for trading physical goods
- A firm that provides financial protection against risks (life, health, property) in exchange for premium payments
- An investment fund that pools money from many investors to purchase securities
- A pool of assets that invests contributions to provide retirement income for employees
- The national institution that manages a country’s currency, money supply, and interest rates
- An investment company that utilizes its own funds or capital from other investors for its expansion and startup operations
- A market for trading short-term debt investments
- A bank that assists corporations in raising capital (via IPOs, bonds) and advises on mergers & acquisitions
- A financial institution formed to facilitate the exchange of payments, securities, or derivatives transaction
Down
- A middleman who connects buyers and sellers to complete a transaction for stock shares, bonds, options, and other financial instruments
- A firm that is approved to carry out statutory audits
- A specialized financial institution responsible for providing securities services
- A licensed financial intermediary accepting deposits and providing loans
- A not-for-profit financial institution that accepts deposits, make loans, and provides a wide array of other financial services and products
- A provider of small loans to underserved populations
- A company that calculates credit ratings and provides them to financial organizations and other companies
- A legal framework focused on the financial safety and stability of institutions and the broader financial system
- A firm or individual who actively quotes both sides of a market in a particular security by providing bids and offers along with the market size of each
- A marketplace where shares of publicly traded companies are bought and sold
20 Clues: A marketplace for trading physical goods • A market for trading short-term debt investments • A decentralized global market for trading currencies • A provider of small loans to underserved populations • A firm that is approved to carry out statutory audits • A licensed financial intermediary accepting deposits and providing loans • ...
