theory of the firm Crossword Puzzles
Physics 2024-12-03
Across
- The temeperature-scale used in Physics
- The one thing that stands between Physics and Maths
- The Mastermind behind The Theory of generell and special relativity
- The first wave that was also discovered to be a particle
- The thing that neutrons distinctly Lack
- The thing found in electronics that stores electrical Charge
- The Person who invented calculus
- The approach to the theory of motion that causes by far the most headaches
Down
- What the "c" in E=mc^2 stands for, written with two "-"
- The Theory that describes electric and magnetic fields
- A way of behaving that is unique to waves
- The tiny particles that make up light
- The Word commonly found in Front of "fusion"
- The tiny thing that most of particle physics is about
- The language that describes the world
- The first and most prominent thing to be known to be indectructible
- Originally defined as Mass Times speed but also found to be possessed by the mass-lass light-particles
- The supposedly undivideable thing that turned out to be quit easy to divide
- The force that was originally called "spooky action at a distance"
19 Clues: The Person who invented calculus • The tiny particles that make up light • The language that describes the world • The temeperature-scale used in Physics • The thing that neutrons distinctly Lack • A way of behaving that is unique to waves • The Word commonly found in Front of "fusion" • The one thing that stands between Physics and Maths • ...
Stage Theory of Cognitive Development 2014-08-18
Across
- When an object cannot be assimilated and the schemata have to be modified to include the object
- It is the first stage in the cognitive development
- In this stage the child is not yet able to conceptualize abstractly
- How many stages has this theory?
- It is the organization of information and absorbing it into existing schema
- Is the set of all mental abilities and processes related to knowledge
- What was the century of Piaget birth?
- In these ages the child creates logical structures.
Down
- This is a way to think that is fully reached in the fourth stage.
- In these ages the objects are clasified in simple ways.
- Piaget was a biologist and a...
- This theory divides the process learning in...
- In these ages cognition reaches its final form.
- In this stage cognition reaches its final form.
- In this stage the child begins to think abstractly
- Nationality of Piaget
- He is the creator of the stage Theory of Cognitive Development
- In these ages the child is able to differentiate between itself and other objects
18 Clues: Nationality of Piaget • Piaget was a biologist and a... • How many stages has this theory? • What was the century of Piaget birth? • This theory divides the process learning in... • In these ages cognition reaches its final form. • In this stage cognition reaches its final form. • It is the first stage in the cognitive development • ...
Science Crossword Puzzle 2013-06-04
Across
- outer planet
- can be minerals
- a step in an experiment
- theory of plate tectonics
- has a nucleus with orbiting electrons
- no change in composition
- theory of evolution
- what aniimals eat
- founder of genetics
Down
- place where life can live
- place where animals live
- change that occurs in composition
- came up with accurate solar system
- transferred from parent to child
- something that changes
- part of an atom
- information collected
- end of an expirement
- on the Periodic table
19 Clues: outer planet • can be minerals • part of an atom • what aniimals eat • theory of evolution • founder of genetics • end of an expirement • information collected • on the Periodic table • something that changes • a step in an experiment • place where animals live • no change in composition • place where life can live • theory of plate tectonics • transferred from parent to child • ...
Please Read Me Crossword 2025-04-21
Across
- Reality star born in Boston, mother to 7 children
- The pop culture podcast with guests like Ariana Grande, Mariah Carey, and Tina Fey
- Oscar winning actress with a name that's an alliteration
- The 3rd Largest “City” in America
- "What happens in __ stays in __"
- A spooky film starring Willem Dafoe
- A great way to get around Brooklyn
- Tess's favorite podcast, hosted by Aussies
- ____ Bakery
Down
- The system Must and Trump want to create
- A trendy sauna and ice bath studio in Flatiron
- Where Burt Goodman worked
- The Instagram version of TikTok
- A rapper who can hold a grudge
- Soft, Medium, Firm, Extra-firm
- Artist who won AOTY at this year's Grammys
- The nightshift attending who keeps Dr. Robby calm
17 Clues: ____ Bakery • Where Burt Goodman worked • A rapper who can hold a grudge • Soft, Medium, Firm, Extra-firm • The Instagram version of TikTok • "What happens in __ stays in __" • The 3rd Largest “City” in America • A great way to get around Brooklyn • A spooky film starring Willem Dafoe • The system Must and Trump want to create • Artist who won AOTY at this year's Grammys • ...
Microeconomics crossword (The answer which consist of two words is divided by "-") 2014-04-09
Across
- monopoly is a firm that must sell each unit of its output for the same price to all its customers.
- The benefit or satisfaction from consuming a good or service is called ______.
- The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has
- of economics that deals with the behavior of individual economic units—consumers, firms, workers, and investors—as well as the markets that these units comprise.
- is the price at which the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied
- A firm’s ______ point is the price and quantity at which it is indifferent between producing and shutting down.
- Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one
- _______ is a firm that cannot influence the price of a good or service — it must “take” the equilibrium market price.
- ________ utility is the change in total utility that results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of a good consumed.
Down
- ______ of a good or service is the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of it.
- _______product of labor is equal to total product divided by the quantity of labor employed.
- We achieve ______ if we cannot produce more of one good without producing less of some other good.
- is a good that can be used in place of another good
- _______is an action taken by an informed person or firm to send a message to uninformed people.
- The ______ elasticity of demand measures how the quantity demanded of a good responds to a change in income, other things remaining the same.
- One of the three types of barriers to entry
- A firm’s ________ is the amount by which its price exceeds its marginal cost
- _________ surplus is the value of a good minus the price paid for it, summed over the quantity bought.
- _________ surplus is the price received for a good minus the minimum-supply price (marginal cost), summed over the quantity sold
- _______ product is the total output produced in a given period.
20 Clues: One of the three types of barriers to entry • is a good that can be used in place of another good • The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has • _______ product is the total output produced in a given period. • Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one • ...
Social Identity Theory & Social Cognitive Theory 2020-11-23
Across
- sorting oneself or other things into groups
- cognitive representation of the self
- the first step in social learning/cognitive theory
- the fourth and final step of social learning/cognitive theory
- the way we store and think about information
Down
- the third step in social learning/cognitive theory
- the second step in social learning/cognitive theory
- a widely held mental picture that is often oversimplified of a person or group
- caused by a situation
- the mental action or process of acquiring knowledge
- experiment relating to this concept run by John Watson
11 Clues: caused by a situation • cognitive representation of the self • sorting oneself or other things into groups • the way we store and think about information • the third step in social learning/cognitive theory • the first step in social learning/cognitive theory • the second step in social learning/cognitive theory • the mental action or process of acquiring knowledge • ...
ELEMENTS OF MARKET RESEARCH 2020-09-10
Across
- Sales forecasting method used.
- To create a customer profile, the firm must investigate behaviour and d______________________
- The purpose of this strategy is to stimulate demand for the firm's products
- Process of dividing the general market into subsets
- Market research is the process of collecting and analysing information about _____________________
- Type of data collected
- Example of a product characteristic
Down
- A _______ market refers to a subset of the population
- The process of measuring the performance of a company's products against competitors
- Research method that collects opinions
- Market refers to the potential ___________ for a product or service
- Those customers that the firm has decided to serve
12 Clues: Type of data collected • Sales forecasting method used. • Example of a product characteristic • Research method that collects opinions • Those customers that the firm has decided to serve • Process of dividing the general market into subsets • A _______ market refers to a subset of the population • Market refers to the potential ___________ for a product or service • ...
Ethics 2017-03-23
Across
- This type of utilitarianism claims that happiness is maximised by following the rules set in place
- Often translated as human flourishing and well being
- Actions which are done under compulsion or done in ignorance
- An anti-realist theory put forward by Ayer
- These imperatives are universal and not dependent on any conditions or desires
- This theory claims that the use of moral judgement is to issue commands about how people should act
- His pleasure machine is used as a criticism of psychological hedonism
- The 'Kingdom of ends' was which formulation of the categorical imperative?
Down
- often interchangeable with usefulness
- This theory claims that since we cannot universalise lying as a maxim, we should never lie and always tell the truth
- This theory has no clear line on the death penalty
- Pleasures of the body; e.g. having a massage
- A principle that guides our decisions
- Believed by some philosophers to be the ultimate goal of our actions
14 Clues: often interchangeable with usefulness • A principle that guides our decisions • An anti-realist theory put forward by Ayer • Pleasures of the body; e.g. having a massage • This theory has no clear line on the death penalty • Often translated as human flourishing and well being • Actions which are done under compulsion or done in ignorance • ...
Capacity Deficiency 2022 2022-04-04
Across
- Mutual Reserve _________ (MRA)
- Firm Load Interruption is imminent or in progress; EEA level _______
- Operating Reserve is comprised of contingency reserve, _________ reserve and load following.
- High _____ state; the expectation of occurrence of some contingencies and the associated consequences requires operating in a more conservative manner.
- Environmental _________ allows generators to produce greater amounts of electricity than would be possible under normal environmental constraints.
- ______ load pick up
- ____ emergency alert (EEA)
Down
- A capacity ______occurs when there is an actual or forecasted shortage in the supply of energy to meet the system load, firm transactions and Operating Reserve commitments.
- ______ Limit State; when firm load cannot be supplied within normal limits; operate to higher limits.
- Aggressive load shedding can result in this condition.
- _____ management procedures in effect in EEA level 2
11 Clues: ______ load pick up • ____ emergency alert (EEA) • Mutual Reserve _________ (MRA) • _____ management procedures in effect in EEA level 2 • Aggressive load shedding can result in this condition. • Firm Load Interruption is imminent or in progress; EEA level _______ • Operating Reserve is comprised of contingency reserve, _________ reserve and load following. • ...
The Cell Test Crossword 2023-11-29
Across
- What is small enough to leave the answer to question 14?
- What contains the answers to questions 20 and 27?
- Who discovered the second Cell Theory?
- What produces energy from sugar through chemical reactions known as Cellular Respiration and is also known as the powerhouse of the cell?
- What makes sugar though the answer to question 22?
- What is the third Cell Theory?
- What decides what goes in and out of the answer to question 6?
- What determines what goes in/out of the cell and also protects and supports the cell?
- What supports and protects the plant cell?
- What is genetic material and also DNA chromosomes that contain instructions for traits?
- Who studied plants (cork) and discovered cells?
- What is made by the answer to question 27 and makes proteins?
- Who discovered the first Cell Theory from studying plants?
- Who discovered the first Cell Theory from studying animals?
- What is also contained in the answer to question 6?
- What digests excess or worn out organelles, food particles, and engulfed bacteria and viruses, as well as being only found in plant cells?
- The answers to questions 1 and 5 have these function: "Transports _______________ " as well as to break down toxins in the cell. The answer is the blank space filled in the quotation marks and the word in the quotation marks. The blank space is what the answer to what the answer to question 24 makes and the question 5 has the answer to question 24 attached to it.
Down
- This is similar to the answer to question 5, but it is also slightly different.
- What is the first Cell Theory?
- Another thing the answer to question 6 does is: "Directs ________ Activities". Fill in the blank and put it all in as the answer.
- This is similar to the answer to question 1, but it is also slightly different.
- What supports and protects the cell's organelles and also contains sone nutrients for the cell?
- What does "Cell" mean?
- What is the second Cell Theory?
- What helps with storage, digestion, and waste removal?
- What is too large to leave the answer to question 14?
- What is also called the "Disposal" of the cell and functions similarly to the answer to question 28?
- What processes and packages proteins and lipids and moves materials within the cells and out of the cell in a small sac called a "vesicle"?
- What is the process where sunlight is used to make sugar?
29 Clues: What does "Cell" mean? • What is the first Cell Theory? • What is the third Cell Theory? • What is the second Cell Theory? • Who discovered the second Cell Theory? • What supports and protects the plant cell? • Who studied plants (cork) and discovered cells? • What contains the answers to questions 20 and 27? • What makes sugar though the answer to question 22? • ...
Unit 8(B) 2015-12-21
Across
- The number of shareholders are very large in a ________ held company
- Most institutional investors avoid these issues
- Dividend policy of the firm has its effect on both the long-term financing and the _______ of shareholders
- A ___________ payout ratio results into fluctuating dividend per share pattern
Down
- Earnings distributed to shareholders
- _____________ may generally put restrictions on dividend payments to protect their interests when the firm is experiencing low liquidity or low profitability
- For existing shareholders, this will be diluted if they do not want or cannot buy additional shares
- The greater the overall _________ of a company, the greater will be its ability to pay dividends
- This is how companies mostly pay dividend
- The dividend policy of the firm has to evolve within the ________ framework
10 Clues: Earnings distributed to shareholders • This is how companies mostly pay dividend • Most institutional investors avoid these issues • The number of shareholders are very large in a ________ held company • The dividend policy of the firm has to evolve within the ________ framework • A ___________ payout ratio results into fluctuating dividend per share pattern • ...
Tectonic Plates 2021-10-02
Across
- evidence for the tectonic plate theory in the form of glacial land ice
- where 90% of earthquakes happen
- molten rock in the earth crust that erupts from volcanoes
- the supercontinent that existed before they spread out to become 7
- The results of tectonic plate movement that release molten rock
- knowledge on which to base a belief
- The big pieces that make up the crust of the earth
- the plate is named after a hot chocolatey drink.
- outer layer of the earth
- elevated land in the earth's crust with steep sides
- scientist that studies the solid-liquid and gaseous matter that make up the earth.
Down
- violent shaking of the ground caused by tectonic plates rubbing against each other
- the plate below the Eurasian plate and directly to the right of the south American plate
- the man who came up with the continental drift theory
- the tectonic plate made up of two continents
- crash together with violent impact
- natural disaster caused by earthquakes where large volumes of water are displaced
- largest tectonic plate
- movement of the edge of one tectonic plate under another
- evidence of tectonic plates in the form of the preserved remains of plants and animals whose bodies were buried in sediments
- carefully thought out explanations for the things that happen in our world but can not be proven.
21 Clues: largest tectonic plate • outer layer of the earth • where 90% of earthquakes happen • crash together with violent impact • knowledge on which to base a belief • the tectonic plate made up of two continents • the plate is named after a hot chocolatey drink. • The big pieces that make up the crust of the earth • elevated land in the earth's crust with steep sides • ...
Communicating: Speaking and Understanding Language 2024-03-09
Across
- ________listening test is noninvasive; thus, it can be administered to healthy individuals.
- Complex form of communication.Compared to other species, it is as high productivity.
- A German neurologist that made significant contribution to the understanding of language processing.
- Three common theories of cerebral asymmetry are the analytic–synthetic theory, the motor theory, and the _______ theory.
- Surgeons have severed the corpus callosum as a treatment for severe ________.
- Perspective posits that language acquisition is primarily driven by innate biological factors
- Human brain is __________. The left hemisphere has somewhat different functions from the right hemisphere.
- A set of axons where the left and right hemispheres exchange information.
- People who have undergone surgery to the corpus callosum
- Language has been called a human ________ because it is so readily and universally learned by infants.
- It is a perspective that emphasizes the role of environmental influences in shaping language development
- It plays a role in converting visual symbol into auditory representations and assigning meaning to written words.
- Both hemispheres control the trunk ______ and facial _______.
- received a Nobel Prize for his research on split-brain patients.
- Also known as acquired dyslexia
- is the area of frontal lobe cortex that lies just in front of the face area of the primary motor cortex; in the left hemisphere, it is the location of Broca’s area.
- Division of labor between the two hemispheres.
Down
- Chomsky's theory proposes that all human languages share a common underlying structure or set of grammatical rules.
- The neural pathway connects Broca's and Wernicke's areas
- in the wild do communicate with gesture, and investigators achieve better result by teaching them American sign language or other visual system.
- The analytic–synthetic theory of ________ asymmetry holds that there are two basic modes of thinking—an analytic mode and a synthetic mode–which have become segregated during the course of evolution in the left and right hemispheres.
- The two hemispheres of a split-brain patient can communicate via an external route; such external communication has been termed _______.
- Damage to the corpus callosum prevents the __________ from exchanging information.
- Support for this theory comes from reports that lesions that produce aphasia often produce other motor deficits
- in the mid 1980 sue savage Rumbaugh Duane Rumbaugh and their associates tried to teach a female ______ name matata no press symbol that lit when touched.
- It is a crucial for speech production and articulation
- Refers to difficulty with writing
- Futher suggest the property of stimulus argument children do not hear many examples of some of the grammatical structure they acquire.
- Responsible for language comprehension
- lies in the posterior region of the lateral fissure; it is thought to play a role in the comprehension of language and is often referred to as Wernicke’s area.
30 Clues: Also known as acquired dyslexia • Refers to difficulty with writing • Responsible for language comprehension • Division of labor between the two hemispheres. • It is a crucial for speech production and articulation • The neural pathway connects Broca's and Wernicke's areas • People who have undergone surgery to the corpus callosum • ...
Left Brain/ Right Brain Theory 2020-02-25
Across
- Right-brained people are said to be more __________.
- Keeping your brain _________ may help increase vitality.
- The ______ brain is sometimes called the digital brain.
- The 2 sides of your brain are ___________.
- Aim for a full night's _______ every night.
- Avoid ______ food.
- Who first came up with the idea of left brain/ right brain theory?
- If you're more __________ in thinking, you're left-brained.
- The left brain/ right brain theory first came around then (years)
Down
- The 2 halves of the brain are connected by _______ ______.
- The right brain is sometimes referred to as this.
- The left brain is credited with this.
- 120 minutes of aerobic exercise a week can improve _______ and verbal memory.
- The 2 halves of the brain are called ________.
- Neuroscientists found no _______ this theory is correct
15 Clues: Avoid ______ food. • The left brain is credited with this. • The 2 sides of your brain are ___________. • Aim for a full night's _______ every night. • The 2 halves of the brain are called ________. • The right brain is sometimes referred to as this. • Right-brained people are said to be more __________. • The ______ brain is sometimes called the digital brain. • ...
Power, Sovereignty, and International Relations 2022-04-20
Across
- type of power based on the collective influence of multiple states
- type of power involving militarial and economic influence
- type of power based on cultural and political influence
- type of power that is held by a single state
- type of power had by larger groups
- state organized by a centralized power that incorporates various territories
- cultural boundaries match up with state boundaries
- political entity with a union of partially self-governing states
- defined cultural group doesn't have specific, legal territory
Down
- type of power held by a single person or group
- short term cooperation between states
- change that preserves existing values
- political theory that examines power differences (especially culture) between Western and Non-Western groups
- characteristic of a leader who the collective believes has the right to rule
- political theory that emphasizes the link between humankind and nature
- political theory that believes capitalism is doomed to fail
- cooperation between states that is typically military related
- group witha common culture/identity
18 Clues: type of power had by larger groups • group witha common culture/identity • short term cooperation between states • change that preserves existing values • type of power that is held by a single state • type of power held by a single person or group • cultural boundaries match up with state boundaries • type of power based on cultural and political influence • ...
Karl Schwarzschild 2024-03-27
Across
- Where He Got His Doctorate
- His Childhood Friend Who Taught Him Advanced Math
- He Was The __ Of His Five Brothers And Sister
- He Liked This Activity Involving Mountains
- He Was The First Member Of His Family To Become It
- Where He Wrote His Papers On The Theory Of Relativity And Quantum Theory
- He Calculated The Radius Of The Event Horizon Of This
- He Found The First Exact Answer To Albert Einstein’s Equations Of General _____
- The Academy He Was Elected To
- His Motivation
- The University He Went To Starting With S
- Where His First Two Papers Were Published When He Was Sixteen
Down
- The Royal Society He Was Elected To
- The Month He Was Born
- The Day He Was Born
- An Obstacle For Him
- His child whose name starts with Ag
- The War He Served In
- The Year He Died
- He Developed The General Rules Of This
- The Month He Died
- The Year He Was Born
- The Secondary School He Went To
- His Wife
- His child whose name starts with Al
- He Developed The Theory Of Atomic
- His child whose name starts with M
- The Day He Died
28 Clues: His Wife • His Motivation • The Day He Died • The Year He Died • The Month He Died • The Day He Was Born • An Obstacle For Him • The War He Served In • The Year He Was Born • The Month He Was Born • Where He Got His Doctorate • The Academy He Was Elected To • The Secondary School He Went To • He Developed The Theory Of Atomic • His child whose name starts with M • ...
Advanced Business & Finance Crossword 2025-09-15
Across
- What's the "GAAP" in common between US and Indian accounts?
- The "group" that selects board members
- Famous consulting firm, initials MBB
- Warren Buffett's company
- The bond's "coupon"—but not a real coupon
- What's "bearish" when falling, "bullish" when rising?
- Which ratio measures a company's leverage?
- A market with a single seller
- IPOs typically raise this, not profits
- The "invisible hand" economist
- The audit opinion you definitely don't want
- What's black and white and read all over in accounting?
- This "spread" isn't for bread, but for risk
- The King of all valuation ratios
Down
- If equity shrinks to zero, what's next?
- Sitting in an office, but not an employee
- The time it takes for an investment to recover its initial outlay
- Reverse of amortization
- In finance, it means "without risk"; in law, "absolute"
- Tax levied on income, not consumption
- The only Big Four firm not based in London
- Asset that gets used up—never capitalized
- The "C" in a CDO, MBS, or ABS
- The last-stage negotiable instrument
- The "cash cow" of consumer finance—plastic money
25 Clues: Reverse of amortization • Warren Buffett's company • The "C" in a CDO, MBS, or ABS • A market with a single seller • The "invisible hand" economist • The King of all valuation ratios • Famous consulting firm, initials MBB • The last-stage negotiable instrument • Tax levied on income, not consumption • The "group" that selects board members • ...
Crim Quiz Review 2024-11-14
Across
- offences where no defence
- Object. case..failing to provide necessities/life
- type of objective intent..leave gun in open
- detention case...meaning of detention
- Mack case about this practice by police
- accused state of mind...(intent type)
- cause theory...your environment when young
- guilty mind
Down
- turning away from truth (intent)
- two or more plan a crime
- guilty act
- what a reasonable person...(intent type)
- intent..swinging a bat in full classroom
- case..search and detention...crack house
- assisting in commission of a crime
- s. 9 rights
- cause theory...you choose crime
- encouraging commission of a crime
- object. case..officer accidentally fires weapon
- cause theory..genetic??
- arrest rights case..legal aid here??
- cause theory...who you associate with
- s. 8 rights
- s. 10 rights
24 Clues: guilty act • s. 9 rights • s. 8 rights • guilty mind • s. 10 rights • cause theory..genetic?? • two or more plan a crime • offences where no defence • cause theory...you choose crime • turning away from truth (intent) • encouraging commission of a crime • assisting in commission of a crime • arrest rights case..legal aid here?? • detention case...meaning of detention • ...
Student led Discussion(Murder for hire) 2023-11-01
Across
- the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence.
- person who has personally seen something happen and so can give a first hand description of it.
- - a decision on a disputed issue in a civil or criminal case or an inquest.
Down
- the act of acquiring a business through illegal activity, operating a business with illegally-derived income, or using a business to commit illegal acts
- financial support paid by one ex-spouse to the other after the marriage has legally ended.
- -abolish, invalidate, or reverse
- -a person, especially a public official, who institutes legal proceedings against someone.
7 Clues: -abolish, invalidate, or reverse • the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence. • - a decision on a disputed issue in a civil or criminal case or an inquest. • financial support paid by one ex-spouse to the other after the marriage has legally ended. • -a person, especially a public official, who institutes legal proceedings against someone. • ...
ESP: The Big Bang Theory 2024-08-20
Across
- The Radiation Era lasted __________ second/s.
- The second Era in the Big Bang Theory.
- When a __________ breaks away an Epoch changes.
- We are currently in the __________ epoch.
- We've been in our current Epoch __________ billion years.
- An educated guess is a _________________.
- 13.8 _________ years ago the earth was created.
Down
- The __________________ is everything.
- There are ___________ epochs in the Matter Era.
- It was extremely ____________ during the Radiation Era.
- Without ___________ we would never had living things.
- There are __________ epochs in the Radiation Era.
- ____________ was the first element created.
- Inside of Eras are ______________.
- The first Era in the Big Bang Theory.
15 Clues: Inside of Eras are ______________. • The __________________ is everything. • The first Era in the Big Bang Theory. • The second Era in the Big Bang Theory. • We are currently in the __________ epoch. • An educated guess is a _________________. • ____________ was the first element created. • The Radiation Era lasted __________ second/s. • ...
Mom and Baby Exam 1 2023-06-05
Across
- Theory that focuses on completing a task even if you might fail; toddlers
- Theory that focuses on caring for child's basic needs creating a sense of trust; infants
- Brain is 90% adult size by this age
- Extrapolating from one situation to another
- Fine peach fuzz hair
- Lipid based substance that protects an infant's skin
- Age group at which vocab is between 8000-14000 words
- Believing thoughts are all powerful
- Age when spinal cord is myelinated
- Type of play that toddlers partake in
Down
- Way in which gross motor skills develop
- Theory that focuses on interest of outdoor activities, peers, and learning; school age kids
- Attributing life-like qualities to inanimate objects
- Develops around 8 months of age
- Way in which fine motor skills develop
- Theory that focuses on body changes; adolescent
- Lazy eye, occurs in one eye
- Creative way to sample activities/behaviors and practice conversation skills
- Theory that focuses on separating from caregiver; toddlers
- Bluish discoloration which goes away in first few days of life
20 Clues: Fine peach fuzz hair • Lazy eye, occurs in one eye • Develops around 8 months of age • Age when spinal cord is myelinated • Brain is 90% adult size by this age • Believing thoughts are all powerful • Type of play that toddlers partake in • Way in which fine motor skills develop • Way in which gross motor skills develop • Extrapolating from one situation to another • ...
Modernism and Globalism 2020-12-07
Across
- Use of cinematic shots in rapid succession
- Literary genre of Verne and Wells; ___ fiction
- Picasso's landmark antiwar work
- Author of "The Rock"
- Author of "The Feminine Mystique"
- Leading action painter of the 20th century
- ___ theory; attempt at a "theory of everything"
- Landmark work of James Joyce
- made use of Native American idioms in music
Down
- continental art capital before 1945
- type of acting associated with Stanislavsky
- Artistic genre of Duchamp
- Artist of the "Great Criticism" series
- Artist of "The Migration Series"
- Sartre treatise; "___ and Nothingness"
- first name of radical choreographer Cunningham
- film genre of Edwin S. Porter
- Pioneer figure in American pop art
- Author of "Go Tell It on the Mountain"
- Author of "Letter from a Birmingham Jail"
20 Clues: Author of "The Rock" • Artistic genre of Duchamp • Landmark work of James Joyce • film genre of Edwin S. Porter • Picasso's landmark antiwar work • Artist of "The Migration Series" • Author of "The Feminine Mystique" • Pioneer figure in American pop art • continental art capital before 1945 • Artist of the "Great Criticism" series • Sartre treatise; "___ and Nothingness" • ...
Evolution 2024-07-16
Across
- this is the struggle for resources between organisms
- a branching tree diagram that shows ancestral relationships among organisms
- changes in the DNA sequence of an organism that occur during DNA replication
- a trait that gives an organism an advantage which allows it to survive more than an organism that doesn’t have it
- this theory explains the origin of how mitochondria and chloroplast merged with prokaryote cells
- theory that states that the inherited traits of organisms have changed over time
- the history of life as documented by fossils
- Similar structures that related species have inherited from a common ancestor
Down
- the movement of alleles from one population to another.
- the process by which organisms that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce
- scientific theory that nonliving matter evolved into living organisms through a series of chemical reactions.
- a change in allele frequencies due to chance
- name of the naturalist that traveled around the world and made observations that led to the theory of evolution
- occurs when two organisms that lack a recent common ancestor end up more and more alike as they adapt to a similar ecological niche.
- the remains or imprints of organisms from earlier geological periods preserved in sedimentary rock
- these were the first living organisms
16 Clues: these were the first living organisms • a change in allele frequencies due to chance • the history of life as documented by fossils • this is the struggle for resources between organisms • the movement of alleles from one population to another. • a branching tree diagram that shows ancestral relationships among organisms • ...
Chapter 7 Vocab Crossword 2016-03-08
Across
- Behavior that under-conforms to accepted norms
- The theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- The theory that individuals learn deviance in a proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed
- An act committed in violation of the law
- Behavior that over-conforms to social expectations
- Only occasional breaking or norms
- Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- The process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- A social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- A method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
Down
- 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 system compromising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statuses
- The process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- A person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- Deviance that becomes lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- A repetition of, or return to, a criminal behavior
- A job related crime committed by high status people
- Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- Behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damaged caused by their acts
- The theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- An undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
24 Clues: Only occasional breaking or norms • An act committed in violation of the law • Behavior that under-conforms to accepted norms • Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • A repetition of, or return to, a criminal behavior • Behavior that over-conforms to social expectations • Behavior that departs from societal or group norms • ...
Crime and Deviance 2023-03-24
Across
- theorist that observed at that an an itself is not deviant unless there is a reaction to it
- the violation of rules or norms
- blemishes that discredit a person's claim to a normal identity
- a group's formal and informal means of enforcing norms
- according to Miller this is the low value placed on being soft or sentimental
- unwritten rules of socially acceptable behaviour
- Marxists see laws and policing as serving the interests of this group.
- ______ means referring to approved ways of reaching cultural goals
- according to Social control theory this has to do with respect and shared human values
Down
- theorist who noted that deviance is functional for society
- the violation of norms that are written into law
- theorist whose major divergence from Durkheim involves the use of power
- the legitimate objectives held out to the members of society
- a reward or punishment for approved behaviour
- Cloward and Ohlin noted at these structures are woven into the life of slums
- Miller suggests that lower class patterns challenge the mainstream values forming these delinquent groups.
- the violation of a society's formally enacted law
- the theorist that studied the strength of bonds an individual has to society
- _____ theory developed by Merton
- theory which suggests people are affected by perceptions and channel behaviour accordingly
20 Clues: the violation of rules or norms • _____ theory developed by Merton • a reward or punishment for approved behaviour • the violation of norms that are written into law • unwritten rules of socially acceptable behaviour • the violation of a society's formally enacted law • a group's formal and informal means of enforcing norms • ...
Art Criticism and Aesthetic Judgment 2024-02-08
Across
- standards of judgment
- a list of all things you see in the work
- an aesthetic theory focusing on realistic presentation
- theory that requires a strong communication of feelings, moods, or ideas from the work to the viewer
- how well the work is organized
- personal interaction with a work of art
Down
- organized system for studying a work of art
- theory that places emphasis on the design qualities
- philosophy or study of the nature of beauty and art
- the realistic qualities that appear in the subject of the work
- those qualities that communicate ideas and moods
- the meaning or mood of the work
- the step in which you determine the degree of artistic merit
- the step in which you discover how the work is organized.
14 Clues: standards of judgment • how well the work is organized • the meaning or mood of the work • personal interaction with a work of art • a list of all things you see in the work • organized system for studying a work of art • those qualities that communicate ideas and moods • theory that places emphasis on the design qualities • ...
Chapter 7 2012-10-07
Across
- an economic model that allows economists to examine competition amoung businesses in the same industry.
- a business that cannot set the prices for its products but, instead, accepts the market price set by the interaction of supply and demand.
- a market structure in which only a few sellers ofter similar products, less competitive than monopolistic competition.
- a market situation in which the costs of production are lowest when only firm provides output.
- setting prices below cost so that smaller producers cannot afford to participate in a market.
- the ideal model of a market economy.
- many sellers often similar, but not standardized, products.
- a legal registration of an invention or process for a certain number of years.
- a business that does not have to consider competitors when setting prices because its a monopoly.
- laws that define monopolys and give government the power to control them and break them up.
- a formal organization of sellers or producers that agree to act together to set prices and limit output.
- requires businesses to reveal product information to customers.
- percent of total shares in a market.
- occurs when competing businesses negotiate to divide up a market.
- using factors other than low on price to try to convince customers to buy one product rather than the others.
- a group of firms combined for purpose of reducing competition in an industry.
- involves actions taken to reduce or remove government oversight and control of business.
- a market structure in which only one seller sells a product for which there are no close substitutes.
- controlling business behavior through a set of rules.
Down
- a monopoly that exists because the government either owns and runs the business or authorizes only one producer.
- a monopoly that exists because the firm controls a manufacturing method, an invention, or a type of technology.
- market structures that lack one of the conditions needed for perfect competition.
- occurs when businesses work together to set the prices of competing products.
- the attempt to distinguish a product from similar products.
- a ruling that requires a firm to stop an unfair business practice.
- a moderated discussion with small groups of costomers.
- the expenses that a new business must pay to enter a market and begin selling to customers.
- a situation in which the average cost of production falls as the producer grows larger.
- a monopoly that exists because there are no other producers or sellers within a certain region.
- a product that costumers consider identical in all essential features to other products in the same market.
- something that hinders a business from entering a market.
- when one company combines with or purchases another to form a single firm.
32 Clues: the ideal model of a market economy. • percent of total shares in a market. • controlling business behavior through a set of rules. • a moderated discussion with small groups of costomers. • something that hinders a business from entering a market. • the attempt to distinguish a product from similar products. • ...
APSY5010 Review 2013-04-18
Across
- The B of Rosenberg and Hovland's (1960)ABC model of attitudes
- Determines how true a measure is of the concept it measures
- Self presentation theory involves low social self _____
- Social ______ theory surrounding social reality and knowledge
Down
- Social ______ also known as social phobia
- Bowlby's theory also applied to adult love
- Self _____ Process of self sabotage in education
- Theory of _______ Behaviour
- _____ to hip ratio, involved in evolutionary theory of attraction
- Women often prefer their ________ friends
10 Clues: Theory of _______ Behaviour • Social ______ also known as social phobia • Women often prefer their ________ friends • Bowlby's theory also applied to adult love • Self _____ Process of self sabotage in education • Self presentation theory involves low social self _____ • Determines how true a measure is of the concept it measures • ...
World History Test Practice Crossword 2017-05-08
Across
- / where were King Louis and his family sent to as prisoners after they were caught trying to escape to Austria?
- / what estate was the most populous
- / What was the building called that was torn apart brick by brick by an angry mob and stormed for weapons.
- / the sense of pride and devotion to ones nation.
- / what country received overseas islands as a reward of helping defeat Napoleon.
- Jefferson / wrote the Declaration of Independence; Enlightenment thinker.
- Theory / theory saying that the sun was the center of the universe.
- the 16th / who was the king during the French Revolution?
- / who was the 3rd president
- Despot / a ruler that tries to do well for his or her people.
- / pushed the idea that the government should have separate branches.
- ladies / what were the women called that stormed the kings palace to kill the queen?
- of Waterloo / what was Napoleon's final battle.
- / afraid to voice his findings of the heliocentric theory until the year of his death.
- them eat cake" / What did Marie Antoinette never say.
- / Marie Antoinette
- Helena / what island did Napoleon die on.
- Newton / created the studies of gravity.
Down
- of France / gathering places for the Enlightenment thinkers.
- Revolution / what bankrupted France?
- Warfare / what caused Napoleon to pull his troops from France.
- Estate / the estate made up of clergy members.
- Franklin / who's the oldest of the Enlightenment thinkers?
- / who was the compromiser radical in the National Convention?
- / what country did America fight against in the American Revolution?
- / who was another radical of the national convention that lead the French Revolution and created the cult of the Supreme Being.
- / what was the richest part of the third estate?
- / the Enlightenment helped "spawn" what revolution?
- / outspoken proponent of rights for women.
- Estate / the estate made up of 1% or less of France's citizens that was nobility.
- Locke / spoke of natural rights; believed people were born good.
- Paul Marat / who did Charlotte Corday kill?
- Court / what was the oath that the people of the Tennis Court made to stay united until a constitution was written for France.
- Galilee / first to use a telescope, discover saturn, and the craters of the moon.
- Theory / theory that said the Earth was the center of the universe.
- Antoinette / who was King Louis the 16th's wife?
- d'etat / this is the day that the government was handed over to Napoleon; the exchange of powers.
37 Clues: / Marie Antoinette • / who was the 3rd president • / what estate was the most populous • Revolution / what bankrupted France? • Newton / created the studies of gravity. • / outspoken proponent of rights for women. • Paul Marat / who did Charlotte Corday kill? • Helena / what island did Napoleon die on. • Estate / the estate made up of clergy members. • ...
Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment 2024-01-04
Across
- Church that supported and upheld the geocentric theory until the 19th Century
- Philosopher, advocate for religious freedom
- _______ world where education focused on Quranic studies religious studies.
- Wrote about and advocated for educational opportunities and reform for women
- French mathematician and philosopher, and believed in rational thought.
- Rooted in reason, this grew out of the Scientific Revolution
- Discovered the Laws of Motion, the Univeral Law of Gravitation; and invented integral and differential Calculus before he turned 26.
- This study pioneered by Harvey and Vesalius contributed to a better understanding of the human body.
- Wrote of natural rights and constitutional government
- Reason the Scientific Revolution began where it did.
Down
- Credited with developing the heliocentric theory.
- Developed the geocentric theory, later proved false
- Used the telescope as a tool to prove the validity of heliocentrism; labeled a heretic; pardoned by the RCC in 1992.
- Group in European society that almost exclusively benefited from the Scientific Revolution.
- Wrote about popular sovereignty
- “The Scientific Revolution marked a _______________ as to how Europe saw the world.”
- emphasized education for the civil service exams and Confucian texts
- Location where the Scientific Revolution began
- Central theme of Enlightenment
19 Clues: Central theme of Enlightenment • Wrote about popular sovereignty • Philosopher, advocate for religious freedom • Location where the Scientific Revolution began • Credited with developing the heliocentric theory. • Developed the geocentric theory, later proved false • Reason the Scientific Revolution began where it did. • ...
Microeconomics crossword (The answer which consist of two words is divided by "-") 2014-04-09
Across
- One of the three types of barriers to entry
- is a good that can be used in place of another good
- is the price at which the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied
- The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has
- _________ surplus is the value of a good minus the price paid for it, summed over the quantity bought.
- _______ product is the total output produced in a given period.
- _________ surplus is the price received for a good minus the minimum-supply price (marginal cost), summed over the quantity sold
Down
- We achieve ______ if we cannot produce more of one good without producing less of some other good.
- _______ is a firm that cannot influence the price of a good or service — it must “take” the equilibrium market price.
- Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one
- of economics that deals with the behavior of individual economic units—consumers, firms, workers, and investors—as well as the markets that these units comprise.
- ________ utility is the change in total utility that results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of a good consumed.
- The benefit or satisfaction from consuming a good or service is called ______.
- _______is an action taken by an informed person or firm to send a message to uninformed people.
- ______ of a good or service is the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of it.
- The ______ elasticity of demand measures how the quantity demanded of a good responds to a change in income, other things remaining the same.
- monopoly is a firm that must sell each unit of its output for the same price to all its customers.
- A firm’s ______ point is the price and quantity at which it is indifferent between producing and shutting down.
- A firm’s ________ is the amount by which its price exceeds its marginal cost
- _______product of labor is equal to total product divided by the quantity of labor employed.
20 Clues: One of the three types of barriers to entry • is a good that can be used in place of another good • The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has • _______ product is the total output produced in a given period. • Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one • ...
Defining the Atom 4.1 2025-11-09
Across
- What determines the identity of an element?
- What kind of microscope is used to look at atoms? (2 words)
- the smallest particle of an element that retains its identity
- all atoms of the same element are
- Where are electrons located? (2 words)
- What is a neutrons charge?
Down
- first to suggest the existence of atoms.
- Where are protons and neutrons located?
- indivisible is the meaning of
- behavior Democritus's theory did not explain? (2 words)
- What is a protons charge?
- A well-substantiated, testable explanation for a set of observations
- What is an electrons charge?
- Who transformed Democritus's idea on atoms into a scientific theory?
14 Clues: What is a protons charge? • What is a neutrons charge? • What is an electrons charge? • indivisible is the meaning of • all atoms of the same element are • Where are electrons located? (2 words) • Where are protons and neutrons located? • first to suggest the existence of atoms. • What determines the identity of an element? • ...
Chapter 2, Period 3 (Bao Tran Nguyen, Aaron Younessi, Maximus Garcia, and Isabelle Ong) 2021-01-25
Across
- Economic security or financial security is the condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future.
- is a method of production whereby an entity focuses on the production of a limited scope of goods to gain a greater degree of efficiency
- The value of the shares issued by a company.
- Individuals have this when property they acquire without the use of force, fraud, or theft is protected from physical invasions by others and they are free to use, exchange, or give their property as long as their actions do not violate the identical rights of others.
- is a good or service that can be consumed by many people at once and that other people cannot be prevented from using.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx, advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs.
- Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available
- an economic system in which private business operates in competition and largely free of state control.
Down
- a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
- an economic system in which production and prices are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
- An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- are expenditures for which the government receives no good, service, or resource in return.
- an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals.
- The ratio of the useful work performed by a machine or in a process to the total energy expended or heat taken in.
- is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other.
- A for-profit business, usually formed as a partnership that provides professional services, such as legal or accounting services.
- comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land.
20 Clues: The value of the shares issued by a company. • Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available • comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land. • consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals. • is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other. • ...
Reinforcement Theory 2013-04-07
Across
- Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___.
- The Pleasure Principle was conceptualised by which famous psychoanalyst?
- Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___?
- Reinforcement theory is a behaviourist theory based on what phenomena?
- Adding a stimulus to increase a desired behaviour is what type of reinforcement?
Down
- Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning?
- What is the last name of our tutor?
- What are stimuli or events that increase the frequency of a response it follows?
- Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer?
- The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture?
10 Clues: What is the last name of our tutor? • Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer? • Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___? • Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___. • The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture? • Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning? • ...
Chapter 7 2025-01-08
Across
- process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- behavior that over-conforms to social expectations
- job-related crimes committed by high-status people
- the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- deviance in which an individual's life and identity are organized around breaking society's norms
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
Down
- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- behavior that departs from societal group norms
- the theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms in which they are exposed
- ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- involving occasional breaking of norms that is not a part of a person's lifestyle or self-concept
- punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts
- an undesirable label that is used to deny a deviant social acceptance
- Merton's theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- a repetition of or return to criminal behavior
- a repayment; a deserved punishment
- an act committed in violation of the law
- a person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- behavior that under conforms to accepted norms
- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
24 Clues: a repayment; a deserved punishment • an act committed in violation of the law • a repetition of or return to criminal behavior • behavior that under conforms to accepted norms • behavior that departs from societal group norms • ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • behavior that over-conforms to social expectations • ...
1920's crossword puzzle 2022-12-01
Across
- perceived as a threat to America
- ban on alcohol
- allowed women to control when they had a family
- women who went against social norms
- defended scopes
- prejudice against foreign born people
- a policy that resists involvement in foreign affaris
- 1916-1970; 6 million African Americans moved from the south to the Northeast and West
Down
- the illegal distribution, manufacture, or sale of goods, especially alcohol
- Darwins theory of evolution (science) vs. creation theory (religion)
- prohibited schools from teaching darwins theory of evolution
- describes the growth and spatial reorganization of a contemporary city.
- US government hunted down suspected communists, socialists, and anarchists
- an establishment to get an illegal drink
- buy now pay later
15 Clues: ban on alcohol • defended scopes • buy now pay later • perceived as a threat to America • women who went against social norms • prejudice against foreign born people • an establishment to get an illegal drink • allowed women to control when they had a family • a policy that resists involvement in foreign affaris • prohibited schools from teaching darwins theory of evolution • ...
Economics A2 Micro 2020-04-21
Across
- Sometimes crossed into Microeconomics
- I paid people $40 USD to buy me (20/04/2020)
- We should be there for Micro Economics
- According to INTELLIGENT ECONOMIST MasterCard and Visa are considered this
- I shrink when people suddenly die
- The diamond industry is considered one
- The number of businesses which are involved at different in the production and distribution of a single good
- Lost their triple-A rating
- The ghost always left it unplugged
- Made conclusions fun and easy to format
- Jackie's dad talk to us about it
- We stick together to benefit the majority
- A theory which considers what would be the outcomes if two or more players were interdependent and made certain choices
- _____ flies in micro economics
- the transfer of organisations or assets from state ownership to private sector ownership
- Beyonce had one of these with Pepsi
- my actions will affect you
- 5th of march 2020 I put my wings away
- A market with a lot of activity and large firms
- Deadweight
- on the 18/04/2020 this company entered voluntary administration
- A way in which oligopolies are price competitive
- Fixing a ___________ price for a monopolist makes the average and marginal revenue curves horizontal for part of these curves
- The movement of people from one place to another with the intentions of settling, permanently or temporarily at a new location
- I am at the end when trying to calculate concentration ratio questions
- machines took my job
- - Economies of scale
Down
- enter a market low leave high
- Direct tax type
- The proportion of a firm's workforce that leaves during the course of a year.
- Support for people who are ill, unemployed, on a low income or are too old to work
- A market where there is freedom of entry to the industry and where costs of exit are low
- Exists when there is only one buyer in the market
- Lets talk about how we can make more money compared to other competitions
- A barrier to entry and or exit
- 2007.
- All information is out there
- Not knowing
- OmniCola, Juice-Up, Super Soda, and King Caffeine have a four firm what?
- Spooky scary
- Measures whether resources are allocated to those goods and services demanded by consumers
- percentage of market _________
- Per Year
- An indirect or overhead cost
- a fixed regular payment earned for work or services
- Businesses
- governments loosening the rains so to speak
- All things equal
- I treat you unfairly
- Martin use a _______
- The UK's finest + a public sector firm
51 Clues: 2007. • Per Year • Businesses • Deadweight • Not knowing • Spooky scary • Direct tax type • All things equal • I treat you unfairly • Martin use a _______ • machines took my job • - Economies of scale • Lost their triple-A rating • my actions will affect you • All information is out there • An indirect or overhead cost • enter a market low leave high • A barrier to entry and or exit • ...
Escape Room 2022-04-18
Across
- brain localization associated with fear
- inability of young children to distinguish their own perspective from that of others
- style of learning Bandura studied
- term for the electrical-chemical firing of a neuron
- view that psych disorders are all bio-based
- informed consent, confidentiality, and debriefing are part of it
- brain area associated with balance and basic motor activities
- research method that follows a group for a long period of time
- Emotion theory that physiological and emotional reaction happen simultaneously
- psychologist who theorized that people go through eight psychosocial stages
- decreasing responsiveness to a constant stimulus
- when the CR occurs in response to many similar CS
- part of the neuron that conduct action potentials toward the cell body
- drive reduction is trying to get you back to this
- surgical procedure in which holes were cut into the skull
- cognitive frameworks
- self-less helping of others
- thinking about one's own cognitions
- ACH and Serotonin are a few
- perspective that Freud developed
- you knew it all along
- often used in drug research
- style of treatment that challenges irrational thinking
- imaging method that utilizes glucose
Down
- what children in Piaget's formal operational stage can do
- firm but flexible parenting style
- focusing on certain stimuli while ignoring others
- irrational fears
- from -1 to 1; how strong the relationship is
- part of the CNS that handles simple reflexes
- the reluctance of people to help if there is a group present
- loss of memory
- research method used to explore causal relationships
- Ekman studied these to see how people really felt
- science of behavior and cognitive processes
- opposite colors remain
- an error in thinking when one cannot see a new possible solution
37 Clues: loss of memory • irrational fears • cognitive frameworks • you knew it all along • opposite colors remain • self-less helping of others • ACH and Serotonin are a few • often used in drug research • perspective that Freud developed • style of learning Bandura studied • firm but flexible parenting style • thinking about one's own cognitions • imaging method that utilizes glucose • ...
Karl Schwarzschild 2024-03-26
Across
- Where He Got His Doctorate
- His Childhood Friend Who Taught Him Advanced Math
- He Was The __ Of His Five Brothers And Sister
- He Liked This Activity Involving Mountains
- He Was The First Member Of His Family To Become It
- Where He Wrote His Papers On The Theory Of Relativity And Quantum Theory
- He Calculated The Radius Of The Event Horizon Of This
- He Found The First Exact Answer To Albert Einstein’s Equations Of General _____
- The Academy He Was Elected To
- His Motivation
- The University He Went To Starting With S
- Where His First Two Papers Were Published When He Was Sixteen
Down
- The Royal Society He Was Elected To
- The Month He Was Born
- The Day He Was Born
- An Obstacle For Him
- His child whose name started with Ag
- The War He Served In
- The Year He Died
- He Developed The General Rules Of This
- The Month He Died
- The Year He Was Born
- The Secondary School He Went To
- His Wife
- His child whose name started with Al
- He Developed The Theory Of Atomic
- His child whose name started with M
- The Day He Died
28 Clues: His Wife • His Motivation • The Day He Died • The Year He Died • The Month He Died • The Day He Was Born • An Obstacle For Him • The War He Served In • The Year He Was Born • The Month He Was Born • Where He Got His Doctorate • The Academy He Was Elected To • The Secondary School He Went To • He Developed The Theory Of Atomic • The Royal Society He Was Elected To • ...
Crossword Puzzle- Review Chapter 7 2022-08-29
Across
- A blog in which the entries are much shorter than traditional blogs and are "in the moment"
- theory, a theory that posits that mass media have direct, powerful effects their audiences
- The stalking or harassing of an individual or organization using the internet or other types of
- content, Social media content that is generated by users, not by large organizations
- A person who is both a producer and a consumer (e.g., a blogger is a prosumer of journalism and opinion)
- A social media user who has subscribed to the content of another user on the same platform
- media, A form of media that blends qualities of both social media and traditional mass media
- A short, descriptive label preceded by a pound (#) sign that is included in social media posts to make them easily searchable
Down
- A website that features, an individual's organization, events, images, sound, clips and video clips.
- theory, A theory that states that media messages are understood through redundancy and have profound effects over time
- media, Social environments that are meant to be used at little or no cost to publish and share messages and information generated by participants
- In diffusion of innovations theory, people who are eager to try new ideas. innovators tend to be extroverts and politically liberal
- A blog in which the creator produces and publishes video entries as part of the blog's content
- The collective term given to Marshall McLuhan's four laws of media
- A message sent through the microblogging service Twitter
- The act of tagging a piece of posted content with the GPS coordinates of it's author at the moment of posting
16 Clues: A message sent through the microblogging service Twitter • The collective term given to Marshall McLuhan's four laws of media • content, Social media content that is generated by users, not by large organizations • theory, a theory that posits that mass media have direct, powerful effects their audiences • ...
Quality Operations Management 2018-12-04
Across
- The design and operation of productive systems
- Common vision that unites an organization, provides consistency in decisions, and keeps the organization moving in the right direction
- Series of activities from supplier to customer that add value to a product or service (supply chain)
- Dividing a job into a series of small tasks each performed by a different worker
- Measure of effectiveness in converting resources into products, generally computed as output divided by input
Down
- Degree to which a nation can produce goods and services that meet the test of international markets
- Standardization of parts initially as replacement parts; enabled mass production
- Managing the flow of information, products and services across a network of customers, enterprises and supply chain partners in order to attain the level of synchronization that will make it more responsive to customer needs while lowering costs, software that plans and executes business processes related to supply chains resilience
- Output/Input
- An emphasis on quality and the strategic role of operations
- production
- A metric used to measure supply chain performance; a set of measures that help managers evaluate performance in critical areas
- High-volume production of a standardized product for a mass market
- Ability to bounce back, change, or adapt in response to a disaster, failure or disruption
- Determining how a firm will compete in the marketplace
- Task that is most central to the operation of a firm; defines the business that a firm is in and is often expressed in a mission statement
- Adaptation of mass production that prizes quality and flexibility; both a philosophy and an integrated system of management that emphasizes the elimination of waste and the continuous improvement of operations
- Activities that a company does best; essential capabilities that create a firm's sustainable competitive advantage
- In operations, the ability to adjust to changes in product mix, production volume, or product and process design
19 Clues: production • Output/Input • The design and operation of productive systems • Determining how a firm will compete in the marketplace • An emphasis on quality and the strategic role of operations • High-volume production of a standardized product for a mass market • Standardization of parts initially as replacement parts; enabled mass production • ...
enlightenment 2022-02-22
Across
- a person who rules with absolute power
- against torture
- a theory that there is an agreement between the government and the governed
- to know something you did not know before
- invented the telescope
- father of modern chemistry
- observed bacteria under a microscope
- belief that the earth is the center of the universe
- people who presented new ways of thinking in the enlightenment
- developed the idea that the planets move in elliptical orbits
- freedom of thought and expression
Down
- women's rights
- separation of powers
- parties where people met to discuss new ideas
- invented the first vaccine
- the belief that the sun is the center of the universe
- advocated for the scientific method
- social contract
- developed the heliocentric theory
- invented the law gravity
20 Clues: women's rights • against torture • social contract • separation of powers • invented the telescope • invented the law gravity • invented the first vaccine • father of modern chemistry • developed the heliocentric theory • freedom of thought and expression • advocated for the scientific method • observed bacteria under a microscope • a person who rules with absolute power • ...
Microeconomics crossword (The answer which consist of two words is divided by "-") 2014-04-09
Across
- _________ surplus is the price received for a good minus the minimum-supply price (marginal cost), summed over the quantity sold
- _______is an action taken by an informed person or firm to send a message to uninformed people.
- We achieve ______ if we cannot produce more of one good without producing less of some other good.
- _______ product is the total output produced in a given period.
- A firm’s ______ point is the price and quantity at which it is indifferent between producing and shutting down.
- A firm’s ________ is the amount by which its price exceeds its marginal cost
- _______ is a firm that cannot influence the price of a good or service — it must “take” the equilibrium market price.
- The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has
- ________ utility is the change in total utility that results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of a good consumed.
- monopoly is a firm that must sell each unit of its output for the same price to all its customers.
- The benefit or satisfaction from consuming a good or service is called ______.
Down
- ______ of a good or service is the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of it.
- _________ surplus is the value of a good minus the price paid for it, summed over the quantity bought.
- The ______ elasticity of demand measures how the quantity demanded of a good responds to a change in income, other things remaining the same.
- Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one
- is the price at which the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied
- is a good that can be used in place of another good
- branch of economics that deals with the behavior of individual economic units—consumers, firms, workers, and investors—as well as the markets that these units comprise.
- One of the three types of barriers to entry
- _______product of labor is equal to total product divided by the quantity of labor employed.
20 Clues: One of the three types of barriers to entry • is a good that can be used in place of another good • The price elasticity of demand is less than 1 and the good has • _______ product is the total output produced in a given period. • Reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one • ...
Personality & Motivation 2022-09-07
Across
- Theories of personality that emphasize cognitive processes (thinking & judging)
- Theory that includes expectancy, instrumentality, and valence
- Theory that attempts to explain specific things that motivate people in different situations, what motivates them
- Identifying how motivation is initiated and sustained
- Theory that personality develops as a result of interaction between individual and environment
Down
- Emphasis on free will and individual experience on personality development
- Derives from the Latin “persona” which references a mask worn by performers
- Emphasize the role of the unconscious on personality
- Driven by the pleasure principle
- Driven by the reality principle
- Incorporates values and morals learned from others
- What gets us to act in service of a goal or goals
- A theory that views personality as made up of innate characteristics that have a genetic/biological basis
13 Clues: Driven by the reality principle • Driven by the pleasure principle • What gets us to act in service of a goal or goals • Incorporates values and morals learned from others • Emphasize the role of the unconscious on personality • Identifying how motivation is initiated and sustained • Theory that includes expectancy, instrumentality, and valence • ...
Vocab words 2023-10-05
Across
- theory that explains how life on earth began
- various structures in different species having the same function but have evolved separately
- the process of selecting organisms with desired traits
- the last shared common ancestor on the branching tree of evolution
- Technique used to determine which fossils are older
- theory that species evolve rapidly
- comparison of early embryonic development reveals similarities which suggest common ancestry
Down
- Bats and butterflies have the same function but evolved separately
- bats, frogs, and lions all have similar bone structure
- a wrong theory:inheritance of acquired characteristics
- black butterflies die out first because they don't blend in well
- the millions of fossils that scientists have collected
- similarities in structure
- the dinosaurs no longer exist because of this
- the theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily
15 Clues: similarities in structure • theory that species evolve rapidly • theory that explains how life on earth began • the dinosaurs no longer exist because of this • Technique used to determine which fossils are older • the theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily • bats, frogs, and lions all have similar bone structure • ...
Age of Discovery 2016-12-20
Across
- Set up Line of Demarcation
- Unproved theory used in the scientific method
- telescope In 1668, Issac Newton was the first to put mirrors in this telescope to improve the image seen
- First of mankind to see cells and microorganisms
- Created two-part naming system for classifying species
- Credited with being first to circumnavigate Earth
- Published "On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres"
- telescope Invention constructed by Galileo Galilei in Italy further proving astronomical theories
- Used Tyco Brahe's research to discover the orbits of the plants around the sun and discovered that the planets move in an ellipse
- Introduced idea of chemical elements
- method Step-by-step process done to prove or further prove a theory
- Force discovered by Isaac Newton that pulls objects to Earth's core
Down
- Type of mathematics developed by Isaac Newton where calculations through the use of certain scientific notations
- Born October 31, 1451, married Felipa Perestrello, and sailed the ocean blue in 1492 in the Santa Maria
- Discovered oxygen in 1774
- Provided evidence for Copernicus's heliocentric theory through an astronomical observatory in the late 1500s
- Englishman who emphasized experimentation and observation and argued that truth is discovered after investigation
- Invented geometric and military compass
- Person was the first to explain the circulation of blood
- Centered around the sun
20 Clues: Centered around the sun • Discovered oxygen in 1774 • Set up Line of Demarcation • Introduced idea of chemical elements • Invented geometric and military compass • Unproved theory used in the scientific method • First of mankind to see cells and microorganisms • Credited with being first to circumnavigate Earth • Created two-part naming system for classifying species • ...
Chapter 2, Period 3 (Bao Tran Nguyen, Aaron Younessi, Maximus Garcia, and Isabelle Ong) 2021-01-25
Across
- Is also known as financial security. Is the condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future.
- is a method of production whereby an entity focuses on the production of a limited scope of goods to gain a greater degree of efficiency
- The value of the shares issued by a company.
- Individuals have this when property they acquire without the use of force, fraud, or theft is protected from physical invasions by others and they are free to use, exchange, or give their property as long as their actions do not violate the identical rights of others.
- is a good or service that can be consumed by many people at once and that other people cannot be prevented from using.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx, advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs.
- Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available
- an economic system in which private business operates in competition and largely free of state control.
Down
- a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
- an economic system in which production and prices are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
- An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- are expenditures for which the government receives no good, service, or resource in return.
- an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals.
- The ratio of the useful work performed by a machine or in a process to the total energy expended or heat taken in.
- is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other.
- A for-profit business, usually formed as a partnership that provides professional services, such as legal or accounting services.
- comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land.
20 Clues: The value of the shares issued by a company. • Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available • comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land. • consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals. • is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other. • ...
Vocab Crossword 2023-09-20
Across
- Greek philosopher who called nature’s basic particle an atom
- Bonding, Special type of dipole-dipole attraction that is the strongest of the intermolecular bonds
- a force that results from one end of a molecule being positive and the other end being negative
- the neutral particle in the nucleus of an atom
- Forces, Short-range proton-neutron, proton-proton, and neutron-neutron forces that hold these particles together
- Vertical columns on the periodic table
- Proposed the “plum pudding” model and discovered the electron
- the basic unit of a chemical element
- Formed the atomic theory of the atom, said atoms were “hard little spheres”
Down
- Discovered the nucleus using his gold foil experiment
- Dispersion Forces, Weakest of the intermolecular forces between two nonpolar molecules
- Number, the number of protons in the nucleus and determines the chemical properties of an element
- the negative particle that circles the nucleus
- Cloud, Current explanation of where electrons might be found in an atom
- Horizontal rows of the periodic table
- A collection of protons and neutrons at the center of an atom
- Molecular Theory, Theory that explains that as atoms speed up, they are more likely to be gases
- the positive particle in the nucleus of an atom
- Number, The total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus
- Used by scientists to explain something we can not see or understand
20 Clues: the basic unit of a chemical element • Horizontal rows of the periodic table • Vertical columns on the periodic table • the negative particle that circles the nucleus • the neutral particle in the nucleus of an atom • the positive particle in the nucleus of an atom • Discovered the nucleus using his gold foil experiment • ...
Unit 3 Topic 1 - The Global Economy 2024-10-31
Across
- The global integration of economies through trade, investment, technology, and finance.
- The sum of skills, abilities, knowledge, and competencies of a country’s workforce.
- A type of integration where member countries adopt common economic policies, often including a shared currency.
- The economist known for developing the theory of comparative advantage.
- An increase in the value of a country's currency relative to another currency.
- A system where a currency’s value is influenced by market forces but with government intervention.
- An international body that deals with the global rules of trade between nations.
- The exchange of goods and services across borders without tariffs, quotas, or other restrictions.
- The model that explains how income moves through the economy in a cycle involving households, businesses, and governments.
- The economist known for developing the theory of absolute advantage in international trade.
- An economic theory developed by Michael Porter that explains a nation's competitive success in a particular industry.
- A decrease in the value of a country's currency relative to another currency.
Down
- The ability of a country to produce more of a good using the same amount of resources as another country.
- A type of exchange rate system where the value of the currency is determined by market forces without government intervention.
- An exchange rate system where a currency's value is tied to another currency or a basket of currencies.
- – A group of countries within a geographic region that reduce trade barriers between members.
- An organization that facilitates trade, promotes economic stability, and helps manage international monetary cooperation.
- The economist known for developing the theory of competitive advantage.
- The ratio of a country's export prices to its import prices, influencing its trade balance.
- The name for a large company that operates in multiple countries, influencing trade patterns.
- The concept where a country can produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another country.
21 Clues: The economist known for developing the theory of competitive advantage. • The economist known for developing the theory of comparative advantage. • A decrease in the value of a country's currency relative to another currency. • An increase in the value of a country's currency relative to another currency. • ...
cr0ssw0rd 2021-11-15
Across
- what does yeast produce?
- __________ breads: use whole-wheat flour
- What does gluten feed on?
- organic leaver; microscopic fungus used in baking.
- How many ingredients do you HAVE to have?
- Recipes with only one rise need to _____ before shaping.
- manipulating dough to develop the gluten and give the dough elasticity.
- Yeast bread takes ______ to prepare.
- what does gluten relate to?
Down
- Dough should _____ in size
- The browned and firm outside part of bread. It can be crunchy and firm or soft and tender. The crumb of all breads soften after it is packaged.
- we _____ to activate gluten
- _______ breads: have more liquid;are beaten vigorously instead of kneading
- what should your dough feel like when your gluten is created?
- what type of flour has the most gluten?
- what can you add to add color?
16 Clues: what does yeast produce? • What does gluten feed on? • Dough should _____ in size • we _____ to activate gluten • what does gluten relate to? • what can you add to add color? • Yeast bread takes ______ to prepare. • what type of flour has the most gluten? • __________ breads: use whole-wheat flour • How many ingredients do you HAVE to have? • ...
Crime and Deviance GCSE Sociology 2025-10-16
Across
- What is the term for crimes committed using computers?
- What is the term for the fear of crime spread by media?
- What is the formal term for breaking the law?
- What do we call shared rules of behaviour in society?
- Which theory sees crime as a result of class conflict?
- What are deeply held beliefs about right and wrong?
- Which theory focuses on small-scale social interactions?
- What is the process of reforming offenders?
- What term describes a group with different norms from mainstream society?
Down
- What term refers to crimes committed by corporations?
- What is the process of learning norms and values?
- What term describes crimes that go unreported?
- What type of crime is committed by professionals?
- Which sociological theory links crime to lack of shared norms?
- What do we call informal or formal consequences for behaviour?
- Which perspective sees crime as functional for society?
- What term describes the process of assigning someone a deviant identity?
17 Clues: What is the process of reforming offenders? • What is the formal term for breaking the law? • What term describes crimes that go unreported? • What is the process of learning norms and values? • What type of crime is committed by professionals? • What are deeply held beliefs about right and wrong? • What term refers to crimes committed by corporations? • ...
Science vocab 2022-09-16
Across
- bending and breaking of earths crust
- solid outer layer of earth
- the middle of the earth
- sudden return of elasticity
- Block of lithosphere that moves
- boundary between 2 touching plates
- strong lower part of the mantle
- Thin outer layer
- when plates move below eachother
- break in body of rock
- edge between 2 or more plates
- when new oceanic lithosphere forms
- between crust and core
- Boundary between 2 plates
Down
- where earthquake first occurs
- Magnetic north and south pole switch
- soft layer of the mantle
- theory of the outer layer of earth
- boundary between 2 passing plates
- matter that forms from dif. density
- explains related observations
- earthquakes starting point
- reason for the splitting of Pangaea
- trembling of the ground
24 Clues: Thin outer layer • break in body of rock • between crust and core • the middle of the earth • trembling of the ground • soft layer of the mantle • Boundary between 2 plates • solid outer layer of earth • earthquakes starting point • sudden return of elasticity • where earthquake first occurs • explains related observations • edge between 2 or more plates • ...
Org. Leadership 2017-10-04
Across
- Going the extra mile.
- We talked about whether strong performers or weak performers were more likely to do this.
- A relationship that goes a long way to benefit you.
- Not transactional psychological contract.
- A firm that exemplifies CSR.
- Violations of expectations.
- “We thought she was what we wanted!” a senior manager of this firm said.
- An example of this behavior is to give employees practical tips on how to improve.
- Prof. Thomas has been emphasizing this organizational attribute throughout this course.
- Managers fail not because they lack IQ, but this.
- This firm mishandles its Indian plants.
- An impression management tactic which might backfire.
- I speak not for myself but for others.
- If you know this about yourself, you are more likely to find an occupation that fits you.
- Not hiring for job performance only.
- An alleged victim of stealing.
- Employees have both entitlements and ____________.
- A form of leader mistreatment.
- Groups with more positive _____ should do better in the Lost On the Moon activity.
- The magic kingdom that struggled with its magic in the beginning.
Down
- 9-11 was a nightmare to this firm.
- Your children is my company’s blessing?
- She exemplifies good leadership in the paper industry.
- Interviews with this quality are often more valid.
- When employees are paired by the organization to be mentored by some senior employees, it is a type of _______ mentoring.
- An org. that successfully implements changes.
- Interviewers following up on your answer.
- They say these people often finish last.
- An increasingly important performance dimension in addition to job performance, OCB, counterproductive behavior, and innovation.
- One of the most important things leaders have to do.
- You have to ______ your emotions when you work in sales.
- Prof. Thomas strongly appreciates your ________________.
- This organization constantly surveys employees about their job attitudes.
- The key to discerning whether one is a good citizen or actor!
- The saddest of Big 5.
- Firms which have more of this are often more innovative.
- She had to do a 900-item personality test before she was hired!
- Interviewers have reasons to pay attention to this quality of interviewees.
- Weyco fired employees who couldn’t stop doing this.
- The nemesis of personality tests.
- An organization’s personality.
- Events that prompt you to consider leaving.
42 Clues: Going the extra mile. • The saddest of Big 5. • Violations of expectations. • A firm that exemplifies CSR. • An alleged victim of stealing. • An organization’s personality. • A form of leader mistreatment. • The nemesis of personality tests. • 9-11 was a nightmare to this firm. • Not hiring for job performance only. • I speak not for myself but for others. • ...
Reinforcement Theory 2013-04-07
Across
- Freud The Pleasure Principle was conceptualised by which famous psychoanalyst?
- Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning?
- Reinforcement theory is a behaviourist theory based on what phenomena?
- What are stimuli or events that increase the frequency of a response it follows?
- Adding a stimulus to increase a desired behaviour is what type of reinforcement?
- The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture?
Down
- Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer?
- Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___?
- Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___.
- What is the last name of our tutor?
10 Clues: What is the last name of our tutor? • Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer? • Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___? • Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___. • The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture? • Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning? • ...
Tech Ed 7 Rocket Science (No Spaces, No Pun Intended) 2019-05-16
Across
- another name for this is missiles
- A flight captain will say "Please fasten you seat belt, we are experiencing some ____ air"
- Leading figure in the development of rocket technology
- the middle of something that develops as you pump air into a bottle
- if a sack is really heavy, you might ______ it on the ground
- Motors for rockets and high powered rockets are classified by _____
- the middle of the force holding you down to earth
Down
- something that pushes a rocket into the air
- a stable airflow
- Cam _____ and acceleration = force * mass + Not theory, but____
- Cam _____ and Stays at rest unless acted upon + Not theory, but____
- known for being the creator of the first liquid-fueled rocket
- Cam _____ and for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction
- theory, but____
- the plural of the answer to "used to change flight path of rockets"
- the word that comes after a countdown 3,2,1, _____
- used to change flight path of rockets
- how fast something is going in a certain direction
18 Clues: theory, but____ • a stable airflow • another name for this is missiles • used to change flight path of rockets • something that pushes a rocket into the air • the middle of the force holding you down to earth • the word that comes after a countdown 3,2,1, _____ • how fast something is going in a certain direction • Leading figure in the development of rocket technology • ...
The Solar System 2015-11-19
Across
- A cloud of dust and gas in space.
- Eclipse: Occurs when the moon passes though earths shadow.
- The scientific study of the universe.
- Colliding matter formed small, irregularly shaped bodies.
- planets: Relatively small and rocky like Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
- The concept of an earth-centered theory.
- The fuzzy, gaseous component of a comet’s head.
- Small solid particle that travels though space.
- Tails: Dust set free from vaporizing ice in the comet, carried away from the comet by the sun’s radiation pressure.
- The depression that is produced by a meteorite.
- Trails: When stars and planets seem to rise and appear to circle polaris.
- Tail: ionzed gos pushed away from the comet by solar wind.
- Small rocky bodies that orbit the sun.
Down
- Theory: A theory on how the solar systems formed.
- Describes the view that the sun is at the center of the solar system.
- The motion of one body about another.
- Pieces of rocky and metal materials held together by frozen water, ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide.
- Eclipse: Occurs when the moon moves in line directly between earth and the sun.
- planets: Huge gas giants like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
- Planet: A round object that orbits the sun but has not cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.
20 Clues: A cloud of dust and gas in space. • The scientific study of the universe. • The motion of one body about another. • Small rocky bodies that orbit the sun. • The concept of an earth-centered theory. • Small solid particle that travels though space. • The depression that is produced by a meteorite. • The fuzzy, gaseous component of a comet’s head. • ...
Production cost and benefits 2025-01-05
Across
- find the answer of formula: VC/Q=?
- TR-TC=? what is the answer of this formula
- find the answer of formula: TC/Q=?
- which kind of profit includes both explicit and implicit costs when calculating
- find the answer of formula: FC/Q=?
- The cost of something you give up to get it
- Amount a firm receuves for the sale of its output
Down
- require an outlay of money e.g., paying wages to workers
- do not require a cash outlay
- in which profit only include explicit cost, so its bigger than another one
- Market value of the inputs a firm uses in production
- which cost vary with the quantity of output produced
- which cost do not vary with the quantity of output produced
13 Clues: do not require a cash outlay • find the answer of formula: VC/Q=? • find the answer of formula: TC/Q=? • find the answer of formula: FC/Q=? • TR-TC=? what is the answer of this formula • The cost of something you give up to get it • Amount a firm receuves for the sale of its output • Market value of the inputs a firm uses in production • ...
Psych 2022-09-15
Across
- the study of how chemical and physical differences change organism's behavior.
- Relating to thinking/understanding.
- the most complex object we know of.
- Scientist that conditioned a dog to salivate even when no food was presented.
- the study of how organisms adapt to their environments.
- the theory that each person has their own freedom in directing their life.
- set up the first psychological lab.
- The scientific study of behavior and the mind in general.
Down
- Psychological theory introduced by Sigmund Freud after watching a doctor treat a patients mental illness via talking.
- studied behaviors and what conditions them
- Based on or confirmed by data and observable evidence rather than logic or theory.
- A theory that says human behavior is influenced by people, culture, and their surroundings.
- The first school of psychological thought, based on introspection.
13 Clues: Relating to thinking/understanding. • the most complex object we know of. • set up the first psychological lab. • studied behaviors and what conditions them • the study of how organisms adapt to their environments. • The scientific study of behavior and the mind in general. • The first school of psychological thought, based on introspection. • ...
Individual & Family Relationships State Test Review 2022-11-10
Across
- Tension building, explosion, honeymoon
- This theory states that we tend to marry people we know
- Men do outside work while women do inside work
- Grows slowly beginning with friendship
- The mental image one has of oneself
- Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance are stages of what?
- Boldly assertive and very pushy
- This type of communication uses a lot of "I" messages
- Who typically pays for the bride's ring?
- Qualities, characteristics, or ideas we feel strongly about
- High risk, high possibility for connection
- This means being equal in all roles
Down
- Three types: verbal, non-verbal, and digital
- Love at first sight, occurs quickly, doesn't last long
- This theory states that we marry the person we are supposed to when the time is right
- A time to discuss marriage goals and commitments and to identify potential marital problems
- This type of goals takes longer than a year to accomplish
- This parenting style is very strict with harsh rules
- This theory says we find people that compliment our needs
- This type of parenting is very lax
- Low self esteem can lead to this
- This type of communication can cause harm to another person
- Low risk, low possibility for connection
- This theory states that we sort people that do not fit our needs
- One big adjustment to make during marriage involves this group of people.
- Any pattern of behavior that involves violence towards another person
26 Clues: Boldly assertive and very pushy • Low self esteem can lead to this • This type of parenting is very lax • The mental image one has of oneself • This means being equal in all roles • Tension building, explosion, honeymoon • Grows slowly beginning with friendship • Low risk, low possibility for connection • Who typically pays for the bride's ring? • ...
American Political Thought Final 2024-05-05
Across
- When social class is primarily hiearchy
- southern politics emphasized defending ___ through deuling and brinkmanship
- derived from Malcom X, self defence and establishment of a separate black economy and society if necessary
- Civil Disobedience
- abrv. Powerful US document that embodies the principles of liberty and justice
- Modernized Hobbe’s Social Contract, argued how modern liberal democracies could still be legitimated by social contract ideas.
- Politics that falls outside “normal” pluralist politics
- ___ challenged that Reconstruction governments, with Black participation, were uniquely corrupt or failures given the extreme post-war conditions
- represents a community justified by God
- On Constitutional Equality
- theory used to explain necessary factors for stable capitalist democratic states
- theory that is traditional to modern society with potential “bad ends” in communism or totalitarianism
- History of conservatism where Republican politicians build a new coalition to overturn the New Deal order based on Democratic failures in Vietnam, Great Society, and inflation
- The main anti-federalist argument and need
- American slavery where African Americans were divorced from African Cultures
- “The thief who attacks my property, I have the right to retaliate”
- Compromise between conservative factions by focusing on freedom as the primary political good
Down
- Moral-political rationality, use of state power to enforce, often Christian, emphasizes authority
- initiated the anti slavery abolitionist movement
- the theory that states had the right to ‘nullify’ legislation applying to them
- His 1980 election represented a decisive rejection of the New Deal Democrat coalition that had governed in some form since the 1930’s.
- Established the birth of modern liberalism
- Era where social groups attacked monopolies, political party patronage, undemocratic processes, and inefficiency
- theory derived from Thomas Hobbes
- Founder of the American Federation of Labor (AFL)
- prevents Congress from abusing its power
- Rights of the individual, Free trade, equality before law, common government for security only
- History of conservatism where the right wing movement organized against the established mainstream, both Republican and Democrat
- theory that there is no ruling majority but instead just differently organized groups
- The process of repairing a group of people because of their identity and in violation of their fundamental rights
30 Clues: Civil Disobedience • On Constitutional Equality • theory derived from Thomas Hobbes • When social class is primarily hiearchy • represents a community justified by God • prevents Congress from abusing its power • Established the birth of modern liberalism • The main anti-federalist argument and need • initiated the anti slavery abolitionist movement • ...
AP Psychology Famous Names 2015-04-15
Across
- Founder of cognitive therapy.
- Invented the first practical intelligence test.
- Most famous for her work in feminine psychology.
- An American developmental psychologist who is well-known for his theory of multiple intelligences.
- An English psychologist known for work in statistics.
- Most well known for his conformity experiments.
- Stanford Prison Experiment.
- American psychologist who conducted pioneering work in hypnotism.
- The very first behavioural psychologist.
- developed eight psychosocial stages that humans encounter throughout their life.
- Swiss psychiatrist and founder of the school of analytical psychology.
- The father of psychology.
Down
- Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy.
- One of the founders of experimental psychology.
- American psychologist who is a pioneer in the study of emotions.
- A slight pervert and weirdly into children (psychodynamic psychologist).
- Most famously known for being a founder of the humanistic approach to psychology.
- Most famous for her work in feminine psychology.
- Highlighted evidence reflecting the affect of labels on psychological disorders.
- American feminist, ethicist, and psychologist best known for her work with and against Lawrence Kohlberg.
- Hierarchy of needs
- American psychologist best known for his theory of stages of moral development
- A contemporary psychologist whose research has helped widen the field of developmental psychology.
- Famous for monkey experiments.
- Language acquisition theory.
- involved a dog in his experiment.
- First psychologist to study cognitive development.
27 Clues: Hierarchy of needs • The father of psychology. • Stanford Prison Experiment. • Language acquisition theory. • Founder of cognitive therapy. • Famous for monkey experiments. • involved a dog in his experiment. • Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy. • The very first behavioural psychologist. • One of the founders of experimental psychology. • ...
Modernism and Globalism 2020-12-07
Across
- use of cinematic shots in rapid succession
- literary genre of Verne and Wells; ___ fiction
- Picasso's landmark antiwar work
- author of "The Rock"
- author of "The Feminine Mystique"
- leading action painter of the 20th century
- ___ theory; attempt at a "theory of everything"
- landmark work of James Joyce
- made use of Native American idioms in music
Down
- continental art capital before 1945
- type of acting associated with Stanislavsky
- artistic genre of Duchamp
- artist of the "Great Criticism" series
- artist of "The Migration Series"
- Sartre treatise; "___ and Nothingness"
- first name of radical choreographer Cunningham
- film genre of Edwin S. Porter
- pioneer figure in American pop art
- author of "Go Tell It on the Mountain"
- author of "Letter from a Birmingham Jail"
20 Clues: author of "The Rock" • artistic genre of Duchamp • landmark work of James Joyce • film genre of Edwin S. Porter • Picasso's landmark antiwar work • artist of "The Migration Series" • author of "The Feminine Mystique" • pioneer figure in American pop art • continental art capital before 1945 • artist of the "Great Criticism" series • Sartre treatise; "___ and Nothingness" • ...
The Enlightenment 2020-10-31
Across
- the man who invented the telescope
- an invention used to make things appear closer
- the father of liberalism
- The man who made the first vaccine
- the man who created the scientific method
- A time period in which modern science developed greatly
- the man who proved, through math, that planets were formed in eclipses
- the man who believed that the people in a society should make their own laws
- The theory meaning the sun is the center of the universe
- an agreement between the people and the government
Down
- an invention used to see things that arent visible to the human eye
- One of the first modern chemists
- Intellectuals of the 18th century enlightenment
- a place provided for people to discuss and congregate
- a man greatly considered one of the most talented jurists and great thinker of the enightenment
- the man who developed the theory that the sun was the center of the universe
- the theory meaning the earth is the center of the universe
- the man who made separation of powers a thing
- the man who discovered gravity's laws
- a man who advocated for the freedom of speech and press during the enlightenment
- the man who said ¨I think therefore I am¨
- one of the first women to fight for women's rights
- the man who wrote the Leviathan
23 Clues: the father of liberalism • the man who wrote the Leviathan • One of the first modern chemists • the man who invented the telescope • The man who made the first vaccine • the man who discovered gravity's laws • the man who created the scientific method • the man who said ¨I think therefore I am¨ • the man who made separation of powers a thing • ...
Crossword Puzzle- Review Chapter 7 2022-08-29
Across
- media, Social environments that are meant to be used at little or no cost to publish and share messages and information generated by participants
- content, Social media content that is generated by users, not by large organizations
- A website that features, an individual's organization, events, images, sound, clips and video clips.
- media, A form of media that blends qualities of both social media and traditional mass media
- A blog in which the entries are much shorter than traditional blogs and are "in the moment"
- The act of tagging a piece of posted content with the GPS coordinates of it's author at the moment of posting
- The collective term given to Marshall McLuhan's four laws of media
- theory, a theory that posits that mass media have direct, powerful effects their audiences
- In diffusion of innovations theory, people who are eager to try new ideas. innovators tend to be extroverts and politically liberal
Down
- The stalking or harassing of an individual or organization using the internet or other types of
- theory, A theory that states that media messages are understood through redundancy and have profound effects over time
- A person who is both a producer and a consumer (e.g., a blogger is a prosumer of journalism and opinion)
- A social media user who has subscribed to the content of another user on the same platform
- A short, descriptive label preceded by a pound (#) sign that is included in social media posts to make them easily searchable
- A blog in which the creator produces and publishes video entries as part of the blog's content
- A message sent through the microblogging service Twitter
16 Clues: A message sent through the microblogging service Twitter • The collective term given to Marshall McLuhan's four laws of media • content, Social media content that is generated by users, not by large organizations • A social media user who has subscribed to the content of another user on the same platform • ...
What Is Language? 2024-03-21
Across
- Study of Sound Systems of Language.
- Repeating of gestures, actions, sounds, or words.
- Study of Structure of Words.
- The theory in which children learn language by creating neural connections in the brain.
- Study of the meaning of words, phrases, and sentences.
Down
- The theory in which children acquire language through other children and particularly adults
- The theory which states children learn language through constant reminding, rewarding, or praise.
- The theory that states children create their own rules on how they talk (the most influential theory).
- Study of rules governing the way words are combined to form sentences.
- Study of language from the point of view from the users.
10 Clues: Study of Structure of Words. • Study of Sound Systems of Language. • Repeating of gestures, actions, sounds, or words. • Study of the meaning of words, phrases, and sentences. • Study of language from the point of view from the users. • Study of rules governing the way words are combined to form sentences. • ...
evolution relearn 2016-05-04
Across
- dating -A technique used to determine which of two fossils is older
- the preserved remains or traces of an organism that lived in the past
- tree -a diagram showing how scientists think different groups of organisms are related.
- - the gradual change in species over time
- -the theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily
- - any different between individuals of the same species
- equilibrium -The theory that species evolve during short periods of rapid change.
- dating -process where scientists look at the half-life of chemical contained in rocks around a fossil to determine the age of fossil
- Darwin-British nationalist who formulate the theory of evolution by natural selection
- fossil -a fossil formed when minerals replace all or part of an organism
- link -gaps in the fossil record
- - a type of fossil that forms when a mold become filled within mineral that then harden
Down
- - a type of fossil formed when a shell or other hard part of an organism dissolves, leaving an empty space in the shape of the part.
- - any change of DNA in the organism
- structure -similar structure that related species have inherited from common ancestor
- selection-a process by which individuals that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce than others that are not
- - behavior or physical characteristic that allows an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment
- theory -a well-tested concept that explains a wide range of observations
- - the disappearance of all members of a species from earth
- -the time it was ages for half of atoms in a radioactive element to decay
- - that variety of organisms that inhabit the earth
- a group of organisms that are physically similar and can mate with each other and produce offspring that can also mate and reproduce
- recorder -the million fossil that scientist have collect
23 Clues: link -gaps in the fossil record • - any change of DNA in the organism • - the gradual change in species over time • - that variety of organisms that inhabit the earth • -the theory that evolution occurs slowly but steadily • - any different between individuals of the same species • - the disappearance of all members of a species from earth • ...
Earth Science Unit 1 2024-08-22
Across
- theory the the solar system formed from cloud of gas
- contains all life on earth
- middle layer of the Earth
- 0 degree latitude line, divides the earth north and south
- this type of map shows elevation
- inner layer of the Earth
- thin gaseous envelope that surrounds the earth
- study of the universe
- well established highly reliable explanation
- all water that makes up the earth
Down
- outer layer of the Earth
- an example of a constructive force
- type of resource that can be renewed relatively shortly
- any resource obtained from the earth
- explanation of observation that can be tested
- study of the Earth
- study of the oceans
- a type of system where energy flows in and out
- powers the atmosphere and hydrosphere
- this type of map shows direction accurately
20 Clues: study of the Earth • study of the oceans • study of the universe • outer layer of the Earth • inner layer of the Earth • middle layer of the Earth • contains all life on earth • this type of map shows elevation • all water that makes up the earth • an example of a constructive force • any resource obtained from the earth • powers the atmosphere and hydrosphere • ...
Chapter 6 & 7 Vocabulary Crossword 2016-04-26
Across
- a government issued right to operate a business
- a minimum price for a good or service
- the right to sell a good or service within an exclusive market
- a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm supplies all of the output
- division of customers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- the expenses a firm must pay before it can begin to produce and sell goods
- factors that cause a producers average cost per unit to fall as output rises
- a minimum price that an employer can pay a worker for an hour of labor
- a monopoly created by the government
- a price ceiling placed on rent
Down
- a market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product
- when quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied.
- costs of production that affect people who have no control over how much of a good is produced
- making a product different from other similar products
- a sudden shortage of a good
- allocating scarce goods and services using criteria other than price
- when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
- a market structure that does not meet the conditions of perfect competition
- when quantity demanded is greater that quantity supplied
- a maximum price that can be legally charged for a good or service
- any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market
- a market in which goods are sold illegally
- the ability of a company to change prices and output like a monopolist
- a license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell it for a certain period of time
- a product that is the same no matter who produces it, such as petroleum, notebook paper, or milk
25 Clues: a sudden shortage of a good • a price ceiling placed on rent • a monopoly created by the government • a minimum price for a good or service • a market in which goods are sold illegally • a government issued right to operate a business • when quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied. • making a product different from other similar products • ...
BASIC ACCOUNTING TERMS 2022-07-06
Across
- It is the liability of the firm towards the proprietor or partners
- It is what firm owes to outsiders like loans from bank,creditors.
- Goods remaining unsold as on a particular date.
- Expenditure incurred to purchase fixed assets.
- Expense paid in the current year but relating to the next financial year.
- Profit earned from the transactions incidental to the business
- Assets which have physical existence.
- A reduction in price of goods sold or in amount.
Down
- A statement of balances of Assets and Liabilities.
- Amount owed to the business that is written off as it becomes irrecoverable.
- Excess of revenue over expenses.
- Liability which is payable within 12 months from the end of the accounting period.
- Economic resources of the entity which will give benefit in the future.
- An evidence of transaction having taken place.
- Amount receivable against sale of goods and/or services or both.
- Amount,goods or assets taken by the proprietor for personal use.
16 Clues: Excess of revenue over expenses. • Assets which have physical existence. • An evidence of transaction having taken place. • Expenditure incurred to purchase fixed assets. • Goods remaining unsold as on a particular date. • A reduction in price of goods sold or in amount. • A statement of balances of Assets and Liabilities. • ...
MY TASK 2020-11-01
Across
- Money paid to the government.
- A device that prints texts or illustrations on paper.
- Anything of value owned by a firm such as cash, accounts receivable, inventory, buildings, land, and equipment.
- A device that controls the movement of the cursor.
- A financial institution where customers can save or borrow money.
- A field of activity involving an independent review of the accounting record.
- The cost asociated with performing a business activity.
- The rights of the owners in a company.
- One who prepares financial statements.
- The process of planning, organizing, directing, and controlling the use of company’s resources to attain its objective effectively and economically.
Down
- A debt of a firm.
- Buying and selling.
- The process of recording, classifying, analyzing, summarizing, reporting, and interpreting the financial information of an organization for use decision making.
- Getting new employees.
- The machines in a computer.
- A person who performs the unique work of management.
- Whatever goes into the computer.
- Stored amount of raw materials, components, or finished product not yet used or sold.
- Relating to money.
- Social science concerned primarily with the way society employs its limited resources, which have alternative uses in order to produce goods and services for present and future consumption.
20 Clues: A debt of a firm. • Relating to money. • Buying and selling. • Getting new employees. • The machines in a computer. • Money paid to the government. • Whatever goes into the computer. • The rights of the owners in a company. • One who prepares financial statements. • A device that controls the movement of the cursor. • A person who performs the unique work of management. • ...
Topic 4 2025-09-24
Across
- Any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market
- The division of consumers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- A license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell it for a specific period of time
- A market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product and no single seller controls supply or prices
- Laws that encourage competition in the marketplace
- A market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical
Down
- When two or more companies join to form a single firm
- The expenses a new business must pay before it can begin to produce and sell goods
- A market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all of the output
- A product that is considered the same no matter who produces or sells it
- pricing Selling a product below cost for a short period of time to drive competitors out of the market
- A way to attract customers through style, service, or location, rather than a lower price
- A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market
- A government issued right to operate a business
- The removal of government controls over a market
- A market in which a single seller dominates
16 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 • A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market • ...
2025/2026 Plate Tectonics Review 2026-01-14
Across
- This is the only liquid layer of the Earth
- This is name of the mega continent that existed 225 million years ago
- This type of crust is heavier and more dense
- This is the innermost layer; made of solid metal
- This layer of the Earth is the thinnest layer and is where we currently are.
- This is the theory that says the Earth's crust is broken into pieces that are moving
- This is the upper part of the Mantle that cause of tectonic plates to move
Down
- This is the bottom part of the crust that is broken into tectonic plates
- This is the theory that says that all the continents used to be combined into a mega-continent and have since drifted apart
- Alfred ______ was the German scientist who developed the Continental Drift Theory
- Fossils, land warping, and continent shapes are all examples of _____ to support the Continental Drift theory
- This is the second layer of the Earth
- This type of crust is lighter and less dense
13 Clues: This is the second layer of the Earth • This is the only liquid layer of the Earth • This type of crust is heavier and more dense • This type of crust is lighter and less dense • This is the innermost layer; made of solid metal • This is name of the mega continent that existed 225 million years ago • ...
Chapter 2, Period 3 (Bao Tran Nguyen, Aaron Younessi, Maximus Garcia, and Isabelle Ong) 2021-01-25
Across
- Is also known as financial security. Is the condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future.
- is a method of production whereby an entity focuses on the production of a limited scope of goods to gain a greater degree of efficiency
- The value of the shares issued by a company.
- Individuals have this when property they acquire without the use of force, fraud, or theft is protected from physical invasions by others and they are free to use, exchange, or give their property as long as their actions do not violate the identical rights of others.
- is a good or service that can be consumed by many people at once and that other people cannot be prevented from using.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx, advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs.
- Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available
- an economic system in which private business operates in competition and largely free of state control.
Down
- a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
- an economic system in which production and prices are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
- An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- are expenditures for which the government receives no good, service, or resource in return.
- an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals.
- The ratio of the useful work performed by a machine or in a process to the total energy expended or heat taken in.
- is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other.
- A for-profit business, usually formed as a partnership that provides professional services, such as legal or accounting services.
- comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land.
20 Clues: The value of the shares issued by a company. • Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available • comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land. • consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals. • is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other. • ...
Chapter 2, Period 3 (Bao Tran Nguyen, Aaron Younessi, Maximus Garcia, and Isabelle Ong) 2021-01-25
Across
- Is also known as financial security. Is the condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future.
- is a method of production whereby an entity focuses on the production of a limited scope of goods to gain a greater degree of efficiency
- The value of the shares issued by a company.
- Individuals have this when property they acquire without the use of force, fraud, or theft is protected from physical invasions by others and they are free to use, exchange, or give their property as long as their actions do not violate the identical rights of others.
- is a good or service that can be consumed by many people at once and that other people cannot be prevented from using.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx, advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs.
- Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available
- an economic system in which private business operates in competition and largely free of state control.
Down
- a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
- an economic system in which production and prices are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
- An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- are expenditures for which the government receives no good, service, or resource in return.
- an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals.
- The ratio of the useful work performed by a machine or in a process to the total energy expended or heat taken in.
- is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other.
- A for-profit business, usually formed as a partnership that provides professional services, such as legal or accounting services.
- comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land.
20 Clues: The value of the shares issued by a company. • Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available • comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land. • consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals. • is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other. • ...
UNIT 1 2023-05-05
Across
- first name of theory of evolution creator
- inconsistent set of three beliefs
- deliberate termination of a foetus
- all powerful
- He created Natural Law
- the way god makes himself known to humans
- said evil is a privation
- an absence of something usually present
- religion tells us the?
- surname of person who spoke about speciesism
- surname of big bang theory creator
- all life is sacred
Down
- means beginning
- science tells us the?
- second primary precept of natural law
- most important source of moral decision making
- we learn that God is what through Genesis
- outside of time and space
- Who painted the creation of adam?
- irenaeus says evil is?
- jesus asked his disciples to carry their?
21 Clues: all powerful • means beginning • all life is sacred • science tells us the? • He created Natural Law • religion tells us the? • irenaeus says evil is? • said evil is a privation • outside of time and space • inconsistent set of three beliefs • Who painted the creation of adam? • deliberate termination of a foetus • surname of big bang theory creator • ...
AP Psych Unit 3 2023-11-30
Across
- the decreased responsiveness to stimuli due to constant simulation
- the sense which tells us where our bodies are oriented in space
- how you experience stuff
- the pitch theory which says all hairs vibrate but each at different speeds
- the phenomenon in which a person can focus their listening on a single speaker among background noises and other conversations
- the pitch theory which says different hairs vibrate in the cochlea for different pitches
- transforming signals into neutral impulses
- the vision theory which says we have three types of cones which make up other colors
Down
- the vision theory which says sensory receptors come in pairs
- the sense which tells us where our body parts are
- interpretation of what comes to you
- the type of sense which includes vision, hearing, and taste
- the type of sense which includes smell and taste
13 Clues: how you experience stuff • interpretation of what comes to you • transforming signals into neutral impulses • the type of sense which includes smell and taste • the sense which tells us where our body parts are • the type of sense which includes vision, hearing, and taste • the vision theory which says sensory receptors come in pairs • ...
PSYCHOLOGY ELIANA THEORYS OF ATTACHMENT 2020-12-02
Across
- innate behaviour that infants have in order to help them survive
- What is the name given to the idea that infants form an attachment with those who feed them
- universally born with
- who disputed Bowblby's idea of the critical period
- Who created the theory of classical conditioning
- what is the period where the attachment must form as proposed by Bowbly called
Down
- Who experimented on rats in order to test classical conditioning theory
- name the study that disputes Bowlby's monotropy theory
- Who proposed the theory of Monotropy
- what type of reinforcement would involve a reward such as a cake?
- what was Bowbly's template for future relationships called
- who suggested learning occurs through watching role models
12 Clues: universally born with • Who proposed the theory of Monotropy • Who created the theory of classical conditioning • who disputed Bowblby's idea of the critical period • name the study that disputes Bowlby's monotropy theory • what was Bowbly's template for future relationships called • who suggested learning occurs through watching role models • ...
Market Powers 2022-12-14
Across
- Profit of a firm over and above what provides its owners with a normal (market equilibrium) return to capital
- A proportionate saving in costs gained by an increased level of production.
- One major firm
- A couple major firms
- We are all dead
- No major firms
- Factors which prevent or deter the entry of new firms into an industry
- One factor of production is fixed
Down
- Firms keeping prices abnormally high without any formal discussion
- Multiple firms coming together to agree to set a price unusually high
- Organization of the petroleum exporting countries
- A group of firms making a pact, often to do something illegal
- Many major firms, not much bias
- Two firms dominate the market
- A situation were firms fight to have the lowest price
15 Clues: One major firm • No major firms • We are all dead • A couple major firms • Two firms dominate the market • Many major firms, not much bias • One factor of production is fixed • Organization of the petroleum exporting countries • A situation were firms fight to have the lowest price • A group of firms making a pact, often to do something illegal • ...
Contemporary Philosophy 2021-04-15
Across
- The man who altered certain emphases in the system of marxism
- Discourse on positivism as a whole is written by__
- Unconscious is reserviour of human motivation comprised of instincts
- Linguistic philosophy was attempted at the beginning of 20th century by a group of philosophers round
- A philosopher whose theory suggest that technology alientes humans from themselves
- Rudolf camap.Friedrich waisman,L.witgenstein and B.Russell formulae a criterion of meaning often called the___principle
- Edmund husseres theory links up with the ideas of
- In 19th century revolt against holy alliance represented mainly by__
- Karl marx‘s theory directly oppose the theory of__
- Philosophy in revolt against traditions
- Western philosopher who is the first person to incorporate eastern philosophy into a systemic history of philosophy
- Husseri created a___method in which the philosopher would not look at what is presented to consiousness
- The university where arthur schopenhauer had studied
- august comte prepared the way of systemic
- Various books were published after marxs death by
Down
- Who thought philosophy results from disease of language and can be going back through language
- The man who pioneered non classical philosophy
- English biologist deeply related with rationalism
- The romantic movement was at first mainly___
- Whose political theories has major influence on facism
- The country where we seen the evolution of a technical philosophy in 20th century
- whose extentialism is atheistic but god‘s absence is positive
- Manifesto The most famous work of marx and Engles
- The writter of the book “Time and Fee will” is
- The major force in the 20th century that strengthen facism and nazism
- Rationalism revolt began with philosophers
- The famous philosopher of the era of german romantism
- British philosopher and mathematician who won nobel prize in literature
- Karl marx stated the beginning of all criticism begins with__
- Freud stated that humans are never able to break completely free of their own___romance
30 Clues: Philosophy in revolt against traditions • august comte prepared the way of systemic • Rationalism revolt began with philosophers • The romantic movement was at first mainly___ • The man who pioneered non classical philosophy • The writter of the book “Time and Fee will” is • English biologist deeply related with rationalism • ...
Contemporary Philosophy 2021-04-15
Across
- The man who altered certain emphases in the system of marxism
- Discourse on positivism as a whole is written by__
- Unconscious is reserviour of human motivation comprised of instincts
- Linguistic philosophy was attempted at the beginning of 20th century by a group of philosophers round
- A philosopher whose theory suggest that technology alientes humans from themselves
- Rudolf camap.Friedrich waisman,L.witgenstein and B.Russell formulae a criterion of meaning often called the___principle
- Edmund husseres theory links up with the ideas of
- In 19th century revolt against holy alliance represented mainly by__
- Karl marx‘s theory directly oppose the theory of__
- Philosophy in revolt against traditions
- Western philosopher who is the first person to incorporate eastern philosophy into a systemic history of philosophy
- Husseri created a___method in which the philosopher would not look at what is presented to consiousness
- The university where arthur schopenhauer had studied
- august comte prepared the way of systemic
- Various books were published after marxs death by
Down
- Who thought philosophy results from disease of language and can be going back through language
- The man who pioneered non classical philosophy
- English biologist deeply related with rationalism
- The romantic movement was at first mainly___
- Whose political theories has major influence on facism
- The country where we seen the evolution of a technical philosophy in 20th century
- whose extentialism is atheistic but god‘s absence is positive
- Manifesto The most famous work of marx and Engles
- The writter of the book “Time and Fee will” is
- The major force in the 20th century that strengthen facism and nazism
- Rationalism revolt began with philosophers
- The famous philosopher of the era of german romantism
- British philosopher and mathematician who won nobel prize in literature
- Karl marx stated the beginning of all criticism begins with__
- Freud stated that humans are never able to break completely free of their own___romance
30 Clues: Philosophy in revolt against traditions • august comte prepared the way of systemic • Rationalism revolt began with philosophers • The romantic movement was at first mainly___ • The man who pioneered non classical philosophy • The writter of the book “Time and Fee will” is • English biologist deeply related with rationalism • ...
Revision for final 2024-12-23
Across
- one which takes a larger percentage of the income or wealth of the rich
- reward to land
- reward to labour
- costs which do not change with output in the short run
- benefits enjoyed by those who are not involved in the consumption and production activities of others directly
- risk bearing and key decision making in business
- the best alternative forgone
- characteristic of money that each unit of money must be identical
- one which takes a larger percentage of the income or wealth of the poor
Down
- the merger of firms producing the same product and at the same stage of production
- benefits received by those directly consuming or producing a product
- function of money that enable people buy and sell
- reward to investment
- function of money enables the value of different items to be compared as prices are expressed in money terms
- the merger of one firm with another firm that either provides an outlet for its products or supplies it with raw materials, components or the products it sells
- function of money that enable people to save
- decisions on government spending and taxation designed to influence aggregate demand
- costs that change with output
- reward to enterprise
- sectors producing services
- characteristic of money that make it easy to carry money around
21 Clues: reward to land • reward to labour • reward to investment • reward to enterprise • sectors producing services • the best alternative forgone • costs that change with output • function of money that enable people to save • risk bearing and key decision making in business • function of money that enable people buy and sell • costs which do not change with output in the short run • ...
Revision for final 2024-12-23
Across
- one which takes a larger percentage of the income or wealth of the rich
- reward to land
- reward to labour
- costs which do not change with output in the short run
- benefits enjoyed by those who are not involved in the consumption and production activities of others directly
- risk bearing and key decision making in business
- the best alternative forgone
- characteristic of money that each unit of money must be identical
- one which takes a larger percentage of the income or wealth of the poor
Down
- the merger of firms producing the same product and at the same stage of production
- benefits received by those directly consuming or producing a product
- function of money that enable people buy and sell
- reward to investment
- function of money enables the value of different items to be compared as prices are expressed in money terms
- the merger of one firm with another firm that either provides an outlet for its products or supplies it with raw materials, components or the products it sells
- function of money that enable people to save
- decisions on government spending and taxation designed to influence aggregate demand
- costs that change with output
- reward to enterprise
- sectors producing services
- characteristic of money that make it easy to carry money around
21 Clues: reward to land • reward to labour • reward to investment • reward to enterprise • sectors producing services • the best alternative forgone • costs that change with output • function of money that enable people to save • risk bearing and key decision making in business • function of money that enable people buy and sell • costs which do not change with output in the short run • ...
Atoms 2024-06-04
Across
- Discovered the neutron & worked with Rutherford to created the present day model
- They gain valance electrons
- an atom or molecule with a net electrical charge
- A Greek scientist who believed atoms are small, hard, invisible, and indestructible particles
- A very small region at the middle of an atom where the protons and neutrons stay
- A positive charged ion
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom
- A famous scientist for another unrelated experiment, he came up with a particle cloud theory.
- Created a boring model based on another pre-existing model
- Proposed the atomic theory and found multiple atomic weights
Down
- Didn't create a model but performed the oil drop experiment
- A form of a chemical element in which the atoms have the same number of protons but with a different number of neutrons
- Nonmetal atoms that carry one or more negative charges
- Equivalent to the amount of protons and neutrons in an atom
- Proposed quantum theory at 23 years old, and proved the previous experiment was true
- A neutral ion
- A negatively charged ion
- Something that is made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons
- Created the Plum Pudding model and proved that atoms could be divided
- Conducted the golf foil experiment and discovered the nucleus
20 Clues: A neutral ion • A positive charged ion • A negatively charged ion • They gain valance electrons • The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom • an atom or molecule with a net electrical charge • Nonmetal atoms that carry one or more negative charges • Created a boring model based on another pre-existing model • ...
Crossword Puzzle World Literature 2021-01-16
Across
- the another literary theory of the story
- literary theory of the story
- son of hindley
- The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights
- title of the story
- daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton
- lacks power
- authors of the story
- has a power
- the son of Heathcliff and Isabella
Down
- What kind of point of view is the stors Wuthering Heights
- heathcliff love of her life
- adopted heathcliff
- heathcliffs wife
- the one who maltreated and abuse heathcliff
- the story taken
- the foil in the story
- protagonist in the stor
- who longs to spend the rest of his life with catherine
- is the power to get the others to do necessary work to produce goods and services they want
20 Clues: lacks power • has a 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 • The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights • daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton • ...
Econ micro 2024-05-12
Across
- excess demand
- when a government increases tax on a product
- things that are thought to be true but with no definite proof
- excess supply
- the amount of money a firm receives from selling goods
- rivalry that exists between firms when trying to sell goods to the same group of customers
- when one firm dominates a market
Down
- the amount of output that can be produced with a given amount of resources
- the amount of goods and services consumers are willing to buy at a given price
- required for survival
- desired goods and services
- money that is paid by a government to make prices lower
- YED is less than 0
- where total revenue is greater than total costs
- a market that is dominated by a few large firms
- the amount of goods and services producers are willing to offer for sale at different prices in a given period of time
16 Clues: excess demand • excess supply • YED is less than 0 • required for survival • desired goods and services • when one firm dominates a market • when a government increases tax on a product • where total revenue is greater than total costs • a market that is dominated by a few large firms • the amount of money a firm receives from selling goods • ...
Anthropology Crossword 2012-10-30
Across
- Cultural anthropology of the past, particularly of prehistoric times.
- Johanson Known for discovering the fossil of a female hominid australopithecine known as "Lucy" in the Afar Triangle region of Hadar, Ethiopia.
- The shared values, beliefs, behaviours and material objects of a group of people.
- The study of human beings as a species and as members of different cultures.
- The sum of environmental influences and conditions acting on an organism (feeding, education, etc.)
- Darwin Created the theory of Natural Selection
- Any member of the zoological family "Hominidae", which consists of the great apes as well as human beings.
Down
- Darwinism The Theory that persons, groups and races are subject to the laws of Natural Selection.
- A group of people who share characteristics of the overall culture but also have important ideas and behaviours
- The study and comparison of past and contemporary cultures
- The theory that all matter and life was created out of nothing by an all powerful creator or God.
- Giving human attributes to animals
- The theory that organisms change structurally and genetically over time, resulting in the gradual development of a new species.
- An object of historical interest that has been produced or shaped by human craft.
- Tendencies, desires, or instincts governing behaviour.
15 Clues: Giving human attributes to animals • Darwin Created the theory of Natural Selection • Tendencies, desires, or instincts governing behaviour. • The study and comparison of past and contemporary cultures • Cultural anthropology of the past, particularly of prehistoric times. • The study of human beings as a species and as members of different cultures. • ...
Unit 1.6 2025-10-23
Across
- nerve : The nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- sense : The sense of body movement and balance
- : Below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness
- implant : A device that converts sounds into electrical signals and stimulates the auditory nerve
- : A tone’s experienced highness or lowness, depends on frequency
- : The process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- : The process by which the lens changes shape to focus images on the retina
- : The amount of energy in a light or sound wave, influencing brightness or loudness
- : Retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray and help with night vision
- : Our system for sensing the position and movement of body parts
- Helmholtz theory : The theory that the retina contains three color receptors: red, green, and blue
- : The sense of smell
- : The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information
- process theory : The theory that opposing retinal processes enable color vision
- threshold : The minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
- threshold : The minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection
Down
- adaptation : Diminished sensitivity as a result of constant stimulation
- : The study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experiences of them
- spot : The point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating an area with no receptor cells
- : A fluid-filled tube in the inner ear that triggers nerve impulses from sound waves
- interaction : The principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food affects taste
- up processing : Analysis that begins with sensory receptors and works up to brain integration
- : Conversion of one form of energy into another
- ear : The innermost part of the ear containing the cochlea and vestibular sacs
- : The distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next
- detection theory : Predicts how and when we detect the presence of faint stimuli amid background noise
- : The colored muscle around the pupil that controls its size
- : The sense or act of hearing
- : The eye’s clear, protective outer layer, covering the pupil and iris
- detectors : Nerve cells in the visual cortex that respond to specific features such as shape or movement
- : The adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
- cognition : The influence of bodily sensations and gestures on thoughts and judgments
- law : To be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage
33 Clues: : The sense of smell • : The sense or act of hearing • sense : The sense of body movement and balance • : Conversion of one form of energy into another • : Below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness • : The colored muscle around the pupil that controls its size • : A tone’s experienced highness or lowness, depends on frequency • ...
Insurance 2 2025-11-24
Across
- Risk related to the lawsuits for bodily injury and property damage
- Techniques that provide for the funding of losses risk namel Risk _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.
- Risks that directly affect an individual or family.
- risk where there is no opportunity for profit or positive outcome
- Risk that refers to uncertainty regarding the firm’s financial goals and objectives
- spreading the loss exposure across different parties.
- Cause of Loss
- A situation in which either profit or loss is possible.
- Risk that can financially cripple or bankrupt the firm if a loss occurs.
Down
- technique refers to having back-ups or copies of important documents or property
- risk control techniques of avoiding the risk
- Techniques that reduce the frequency or severity of losses. Risk _ _ _ _ _ _ _.
- Physically or technologically separating items.
- Condition that creates or increases the frequency or severity of loss
- reduces the probability of loss so that frequency of losses is reduced Loss - - - - - - - - - -
- Risk of collapse of an entire system
- risk related to of adverse changes in commodity prices, interest rates, foreign exchange rates, and the value of money.
- Insurance company concentrate on this type of risk
- reduce the severity of a loss after it occurs. Loss _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.
- Risk management that combines into a single unified treatment program all major risks faced by the firm
- Risk related to the firm’s business operations
21 Clues: Cause of Loss • Risk of collapse of an entire system • risk control techniques of avoiding the risk • Risk related to the firm’s business operations • Physically or technologically separating items. • Insurance company concentrate on this type of risk • Risks that directly affect an individual or family. • spreading the loss exposure across different parties. • ...
Supply Terms 2021-09-30
Across
- extra revenue from the sale of one additional unit of output
- production level where total cost equals total revenue; production needed if the firm is to recover its costs
- the volume of production where marginal cost and marginal revenue are equal
- extra cost of producing one additional unit of production
- principle that more will be offered for sale at higher prices than at lower prices
- stage of production where output increases at a shrinking rate as more units of variable input are added
- a measure of the degree to which the quantity supplied responds to a change in price.
- the cost that changes when the business’s rate of operation or output changes.
- a payment to an individual, business, or other group to encourage or protect a certain type of economic activity.
- the amount that a single producer or all producers bring to market at any given price.
- average price that every unit of output sells for
- a production period long enough for the firm to adjust the quantities of all its productive resources, including capital.
- gives time, money, or effort
- costs of production that do not change when output changes
- electronic business or exchange conducted over the Internet
- the supply curve that shows the quantities offered at various prices by all producers that offer the product for sale in a given market.
- Different supply-schedule a listing of the various quantities of a particular product a producer would supply at all possible prices in the market.
Down
- variable cost plus fixed cost; all costs associated with production
- a situation where suppliers offer different amounts of a product for sale at all possible prices in the market.
- the change in the amount offered for sale in response to a change in price.
- the total output produced by the firm.
- a figure that shows how total output changes when the amount of a single variable input (usually labor) changes while all other inputs are held constant.
- broad category of fixed costs that includes interest, rent, taxes, and executive salaries
- The amount of a product grown, produced, or acquired and offered for sale at all possible prices that could prevail in the market.
- curve a graph showing the various quantities supplied at all possible prices that might prevail in the market at any given time.
- the extra output or change in total product caused by adding one more unit of variable input.
- assumed but not proven
- phases of production that consist of increasing, decreasing, and negative returns
- total amount earned by a firm from the sale of its products; average price of a good sold times the quantity sold
- handled by way of
- a production period so brief that only the amount of the variable input can be changed.
- produces or brings into being
32 Clues: handled by way of • assumed but not proven • gives time, money, or effort • produces or brings into being • the total output produced by the firm. • average price that every unit of output sells for • extra cost of producing one additional unit of production • costs of production that do not change when output changes • ...
Motivation Theories Puzzle 2025-07-22
Across
- : A drive to influence others
- : The theorist behind the Two-Factor Theory
- : Theory X and Theory Y theorist
- : A theory including expectancy, instrumentality, and valence
- : Maslow’s top-level need
- : Another name for Herzberg’s theory
Down
- : One of McClelland’s three needs
- Theory : A hierarchy of human needs
- : A theory emphasizing fairness
9 Clues: : Maslow’s top-level need • : A drive to influence others • : A theory emphasizing fairness • : Theory X and Theory Y theorist • : One of McClelland’s three needs • : Another name for Herzberg’s theory • Theory : A hierarchy of human needs • : The theorist behind the Two-Factor Theory • : A theory including expectancy, instrumentality, and valence
Rosa Parks 2025-05-27
Across
- Unity or agreement of feeling or action, especially among a group.
- A severe test or trial.
- The action of harming someone because they have harmed oneself; revenge.
- Firm determination to do something.
- Never done or known before.
- The enforced separation of different racial groups in a country, community, or establishment.
- Evidence based on personal stories rather than facts or research.
- Open resistance; bold disobedience.
Down
- A punitive ban that forbids relations with certain groups or persons.
- Something that causes a significant change to happen.
- A prominent civil rights organization.
- Extremely tiring and demanding.
- Treatment or circumstances that cause one to feel shame or to lose one's dignity.
- Full of something, especially something undesirable.
- The act of making something continue indefinitely.
- The capacity to recover quickly from difficulties; toughness.
- Crow Laws enforcing racial segregation in the Southern US.
- Not giving way to pressure; firm and inflexible.
- Based on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system.
- Relating to deep, instinctive feelings rather than intellect.
20 Clues: A severe test or trial. • Never done or known before. • Extremely tiring and demanding. • Firm determination to do something. • Open resistance; bold disobedience. • A prominent civil rights organization. • Not giving way to pressure; firm and inflexible. • The act of making something continue indefinitely. • Full of something, especially something undesirable. • ...
Developmental Psychology 2022-12-20
Across
- Moral development theorist.
- Concept that things continue to exist even when they are out of sight.
- Using old thinking strategies to deal with new situations.
- Stage in Piaget's theory when children are capable of abstract thought.
- Fear of adults other than caregivers, peaks at 8-9months.
- Parents are nurturing but do not provide much guidance.
- Development from the center outward.
- Concept or framework that helps us organize and interpret information
- Coined the 8 stages of psychosocial development.
- Type of intelligence that enables a person to reason quickly- declines with age.
- Parents guide the child with dialogue, children become well self-regulated.
- Name given to the developing baby from three months to birth.
- Type of intelligence that grows over the years; an accumulation of knowledge and skills.
- Level of Kohlberg's theory where self interest drives justifications for behavior.
- Theorist who developed ideas about attachment in the strange situation.
- Russian psychologist who studied how a child's mind develops through social interaction and internalized language.
- Abnormal brain deterioration in late adulthood.
- Being unable to see things from another person's point of view.
- Reflex causing the newborn infant to turn its head toward something touching its cheek.
- Children are expected to obey strict rules or risk punishment in this parenting style.
- Environmental risks that may cause birth defects.
- Female moral development theorist; countered Kohlberg's theory.
Down
- Developing baby from conception to 2 weeks.
- Level of Kohlberg's theory where conforming to rules dominates moral reasoning.
- Rules and laws may be broken based on personal ethical principles in this level of Kohlberg's theory.
- Reflex causing the newborn to close their fist around something put in their hand.
- Emotional bond that forms during the first year that makes babies cling to their caregivers for safety/comfort.
- Sense of independence.
- The automatic biological unfolding of development in an organism.
- First menstrual period.
- Organ the fetus is attached to in the womb during development.
- Stage of cognitive development where object permanence is developed.
- What we call the baby from 2 weeks to 3 months.
- Changing old ways of thinking to adjust to new situations according to Piaget.
- This part of the brain lags behind in development during the teenage years.
35 Clues: Sense of independence. • First menstrual period. • Moral development theorist. • Development from the center outward. • Developing baby from conception to 2 weeks. • What we call the baby from 2 weeks to 3 months. • Abnormal brain deterioration in late adulthood. • Coined the 8 stages of psychosocial development. • Environmental risks that may cause birth defects. • ...
Scientific Revolution and the Age of Absolutism 2017-01-03
Across
- absolute monarch of France
- further developed the laws of planetary motion
- proved the heliocentric theory with a telescope, persecuted by the Church for his published findings
- promoted the scientific method
- known as the "great" Westernizer of Russia
- the grand palace of Louis XIV
- the "natural" order that governs all things
Down
- the nickname of Louix XIV as "all things revolved around him"
- discovered the circular movement of blood in the circulatory system
- skeptical review of received wisdom
- the theory in absolutism that states that a monarch's right to rule comes from God
- promoted the Heliocentric theory of the universee
- laws of gravity, natural laws, invented calculus, principals of motion
- belief that God was the creator of natural laws but was impersonal and did not interact with creation
14 Clues: absolute monarch of France • the grand palace of Louis XIV • promoted the scientific method • skeptical review of received wisdom • known as the "great" Westernizer of Russia • the "natural" order that governs all things • further developed the laws of planetary motion • promoted the Heliocentric theory of the universee • ...
Chapter 2, Period 3 (Bao Tran Nguyen, Aaron Younessi, Maximus Garcia, and Isabelle Ong) 2021-01-25
Across
- Is also known as financial security. Is the condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future.
- is a method of production whereby an entity focuses on the production of a limited scope of goods to gain a greater degree of efficiency
- The value of the shares issued by a company.
- Individuals have this when property they acquire without the use of force, fraud, or theft is protected from physical invasions by others and they are free to use, exchange, or give their property as long as their actions do not violate the identical rights of others.
- is a good or service that can be consumed by many people at once and that other people cannot be prevented from using.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx, advocating class war and leading to a society in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs.
- Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available
- an economic system in which private business operates in competition and largely free of state control.
Down
- a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
- an economic system in which production and prices are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
- An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- are expenditures for which the government receives no good, service, or resource in return.
- an increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals.
- The ratio of the useful work performed by a machine or in a process to the total energy expended or heat taken in.
- is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other.
- A for-profit business, usually formed as a partnership that provides professional services, such as legal or accounting services.
- comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land.
20 Clues: The value of the shares issued by a company. • Measure in comfort in terms of goods and services available • comprises all naturally occurring resources as well as geographic land. • consists of one or more people who live in the same dwelling and share meals. • is the place where supply and demand of final goods interact with each other. • ...
Motivation - Four Drive Theory 2023-01-10
Across
- feeling of belonging
- Business school associated with Four Drive Theory
- In Four Drive Theory each need is …, (not a hierarchy of needs)
- Drive to learn
- Needs are satisfied directly affect emotions and …
Down
- Number of basic motivational needs according to Lawrence and Nohria
- DriveTheory need to acquire, bond, defend and comprehend (3 words)
- The need to gain
- Four Drive Theory is based on an understanding of human …
- One author of Four Drive Theory
- Drive linked to people’s fear and resistance to change
- Co-author of Four Drive Theory
12 Clues: Drive to learn • The need to gain • feeling of belonging • Co-author of Four Drive Theory • One author of Four Drive Theory • Business school associated with Four Drive Theory • Needs are satisfied directly affect emotions and … • Drive linked to people’s fear and resistance to change • Four Drive Theory is based on an understanding of human … • ...
Econ Topic 4 Vocabulary 2024-12-02
Across
- Start-up costs are the _____a new business must pay before it can begin to produce and sell goods
- _____ monopoly is a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all of the output
- Price _____ is an agreement among firms to charge one price for the same good
- A government-issued right to operate a business
- Non-price ___ is a way to attract customers through style, service, or location rather than a lower price
- _____ laws encourage competition in the marketplace
- A market in which a single seller dominates
- _____ pricing is selling a product below cost for a short period of time to drive competitors out of the market
- A product, such as petroleum or milk, that is considered the same no matter who produces or sells it
Down
- _____ competition is a market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical
- price _____ is the division of consumers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- The removal of government controls over a market
- When two or more companies join to form a single firm/company
- An illegal agreement among firms to divide the market, set prices, or limit production
- _____ competition is a market structure in which a large number of firms all produce the same product and no single seller controls supply or prices
- Aa license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell it for a specific period of time
- A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market
- Barriers to ___ is any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market
18 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 encourage competition in the marketplace • When two or more companies join to form a single firm/company • A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market • ...
Career 2025-06-23
Across
- _____ force - Individuals not actively seeking employment (stay at home caregivers, prisoners, etc.)
- Planned __________ - Component of Krumboltz's social learning theory wherein individuals take advantage of/capitalize on unpredictable conditions
- __________ needs occur when workers are needed to replace individuals who have left the workforce
- Fourth phase of the first stage of Tiedeman and O'Hara's theory of career decision making that in which people reassess their decision and clarify options
- _______ processing - Third domain of CIP involving introspection and self-analysis
- Vocational ________ - Aspect of Kelly's personal construct psychology in which people develop these to assist in finding purpose at work
Down
- First domain of CIP that parallels trait-and-factor theory
- Theories that deal with ideal approaches to career decision making
- _____ needs occur when the need for workers exceeds the number of existing workers
- Acronym - Cognitive skills needed in CIP's second stage (decision-making skills)
- Acronym - Theory that emphasizes self-efficacy, outcome expectations, and personal goals.
- Theories that explain how people actually make vocational choices
- Acronym - Hansen's holistic theory that emphasizes the integration of physical, psychological, and spiritual into career decision-making
13 Clues: First domain of CIP that parallels trait-and-factor theory • Theories that explain how people actually make vocational choices • Theories that deal with ideal approaches to career decision making • Acronym - Cognitive skills needed in CIP's second stage (decision-making skills) • ...
Reinforcement Theory 2013-04-07
Across
- Reinforcement theory is a behaviourist theory based on what phenomena?
- Adding a stimulus to increase a desired behaviour is what type of reinforcement?
- The Pleasure Principle was conceptualised by which famous psychoanalyst?
- What is the last name of our tutor?
- The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture?
Down
- What are stimuli or events that increase the frequency of a response it follows?
- Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning?
- Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___?
- Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___.
- Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer?
10 Clues: What is the last name of our tutor? • Giving child a toy is what type of reinforcer? • Reinforcement theory consists of reward and ___? • Behaviour determined by consequences is the law of ___. • The reinforcement theory was the topic of which lecture? • Reinforcement theory is based on what type of conditioning? • ...
Unit 1 Assignment 2025-04-18
Across
- A theory that the elite have a disproportionate amount of influence in the policymaking process
- Democratic A theory that widespread political participation is essential
- Federalism the programs and authority are clearly divided between national, state, and local government
- clause that states laws passed by Congress are supreme
- and proper clause that is a critical source of power for the national government
- A theory that emphasizes the role of groups in the policymaking process
Down
- Supporters of the Constitution, who called for a strong national government
- divides power among layers of government
- clause that grants Congress the power to trade
- Federalism all levels of government work together
- Opposed the Constitution, who called for stronger state governments
- powers powers only the national government may exercise
- of Confederation the first Constitution of the U.S. establishing a weak central government
- powers powers granted to the national government in the Constitution
- the framers of the constitution tried to reduce____ at a national level
- powers powers not specifically granted to the federal government
16 Clues: divides power among layers of government • clause that grants Congress the power to trade • Federalism all levels of government work together • clause that states laws passed by Congress are supreme • powers powers only the national government may exercise • powers powers not specifically granted to the federal government • ...
7-3 Deviance Symbolic Interaction No-Spaces 2024-04-18
Across
- If teenage girls are expecting a baby, they are ridiculed for breaking the rules that were created by ___
- ___ ___ provides an explanation for why deviant behavior depends upon who is involved and where they are living
- We are taught deviance by our ___ ___ , according to differential association theory
- __ __ : deviance occurs when you know a lot of deviants, they are important to you, and you are not very old.
- Secondary deviance means deviance as a lifestyle, & deviance as part of one’s personal ____ .
- It takes more than one person to achieve ___ , but only one person is criticized after the fact, & labeling theory shows us why.
- You imitate criminal activity when you see it exhibited by someone ___ in your life, per differential association
- Becker: “Deviance happens when society manufactures ___ and then forces those ___ onto other people.”
- Joe is released from jail and rejected by his hometown, because of the stigma of a ___ ___ .
- Labeling can give rise to an unflattering title that is used to keep people from fitting into society, also known as a ___ .
- You learn to be conservative or Buddhist or deviant all by ___ with other people, per differential association
Down
- If students have teachers that ___ ___ as troublemakers, this is a sign of secondary deviance.
- ___ ___ dictates deviant behavior, according to labeling theory, not the behavior itself.
- If teenage boys are expecting a baby, they receive no ridicule because their ___ is not the same as it is for girls
- Becker: “A person is not deviant because of what they do, but because of the ___ of norms by another person”
- Functionalism, conflict theory, and ___ ___ all analyze society, and the latter provides us with labeling theory
- If you break the speed limit every once in a while, you are only guilty of ___ ___ .
- The ___ you are when you see criminal activity, the more likely it is that you will imitate criminal activity
- Sutherland argued that our biology played less of a role in deviance than our ___
- Through ___ we learn either to follow group norms, or we learn to be deviant, per interactionists.
20 Clues: Sutherland argued that our biology played less of a role in deviance than our ___ • We are taught deviance by our ___ ___ , according to differential association theory • If you break the speed limit every once in a while, you are only guilty of ___ ___ . • ___ ___ dictates deviant behavior, according to labeling theory, not the behavior itself. • ...
