Answer:
They wish the speaker would choose a more reliable profession.
Explanation:
Based on the excerpt taken from "Binding Memories", we can see the reaction of the parents towards their daughter's pursuit of a career in book publishing. Especially, the mention of the words that her "parents skeptically, worried that my business would fail, that I was behind the times" shows their worries and also uncertain about the business. They wished that she had chosen something more practical and professionally reliable. For them, a publishing house is of no use for this modern age that hardly have any use for books.
<u>Answer:
</u>
The model that involves such recognition is referred to as the 'ideal model' of undue influence.
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- The ideal model of undue influence refers to the cases of financial remuneration where the influence creates an ignorance towards the differences existent in the remuneration of employees working at the same level.
- The inverse of this model is also true and is again considered to be a part of undue influence. But in that case, the nature of work allocated to the employees is different in true sense.
Letter B is the correct answer.
In Business, a gatekeeper is a person who facilitates the participation of others in a conversation or meeting by asking for different opinions or inputs. Gatekeepers make a way for the quieter one in the group to speak and also find ways to avoid the other who speak too much from dominating the discussion.
Answer:
The correct answer is Obliteration
Explanation:
Obliteration means eradication, erasure.
Something that is obliterated means that it is gone.
In sociology, the word obliteration can take many connotations, one of them being cultural obliteration.
Cultural obliteration usually occurs when a person moves to a country that has a cultural context that they are not used to but end up adapting said culture. What happens with their original cultural identity is known as Obliteration. It can also happen when a person adopts their partners' cultural identity while sacrificing their own.
In this particular case, Keiko grew in Japan and Wahid in Egypt.
They got married in the United States and they decided to stay there and "become American" rather than negotiate the differences between their two cultures. This scenario exemplifies obliteration.