Math, asked by hd208516, 2 months ago

Have you ever been in the middle of telling a story and had to use hand gestures or even a drawing to make your point? In algebra, if we want to illustrate or visualize a key feature of a function, we sometimes have to write the function in a different form—such as a table, graph, or equation—to determine the specific key feature we’re looking for.

Think about your interactions with others and situations you’ve come across in your own life. How have you had to adjust or change the way you represented something based on either the concept you were trying to describe or the person you were interacting with?

Answers

Answered by anganuradhadaimary
3

Answer:

I like your concept friend

because We generally explain people's behavior by attributing to it internal dispositions and/or to external situations. In committing the fundamental attribution error, we underestimate the influence of the situation on others' actions

Answered by janessafaraon
1

Answer:

I can utilize different hand signals and verbal terms depending on who I'm explaining to. If it's for work, I'd have to develop universally appropriate phrasing and gestures. However, with friends and family, I could use inside jokes to assist me in explaining.

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