What is a basic strategy for dealing with conflict?

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Answer 1
Answer: Avoiding, accommodating, forcing, compromising, and collaborating are all basic strategies for conflict

Related Questions

How does elisa's attitude change after the fixer leaves• gets enraged•turns vengeful•grows confident•becomes melancholy
___ helps you understand when an action occurred
Natasha tells her psychology professor that she wants to study why similarity leads to attraction. "That’s great," her professor replies. "But what do you mean, exactly, by ‘similarity’ and ‘attraction’?" What is Natasha’s professor urging her to do?
In which of the following film cuts would the length of scenes be altered?A) director'sB) editor'sC) producer'sD) master
I need an example:about three things cannot be long hidden:the sun,the moon, and the truth

In the call of the wild curly was killed because

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Curly was trying to be friendly to a husky dog, but the dog was vicious and began to attack her face, she was trying to protect herself, but then the pack of 30-40 dogs came and attacked her as well, killing her in the process.

Answer:

she was friendly and did not see the danger in the other dogs

Explanation:

Reread the second paragraph of the passage which begins on page 1 and ends on page 2. Select the sentence in the paragraph central idea that states the of the passage

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Answer: for this reason strict rules must be put into place to protect young players from experiencing serious or lasting damage as a result of concussions.

Answer: For this reason strict rules must be put into pace to protect young players from experiencing serious or lasting damage as a result of concussion s.

Explanation:

What does a labor activist mean? or is that not even a word?

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its mean you have to act or activity in class to help teacher or student

(LC)Read this sentence:He has been peering through that window for nearly three hours now, but I have no idea what he sees.
Based on the context, peering means which of the following?
A) Singing
B) Looking
C) Thinking
D) Sleeping

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The meaning of the word "peering" in the given context is B. Looking.

What is a Context?

This refers to the use of a word in a given sentence and way that might mean a different thing from its original meaning.

Hence, we can see that from the given sentence, there is the narration of the person that has been peering through a window for hours and this is a synonym that means he is looking.

Read more about synonyms here:

brainly.com/question/76433

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i think its
b) looking ???
because after comma it says "but i have no idea what he SEES"

Match each item in Column A to an answer in Column B. What property is shown by the equation? Column A: 1. –(–33 + 18) = 33 + (–18) 2. –10 + (–15) = –15 + (–10) 3. 4 + (29 + 16) = 4 + (16 + 29) 4. –12 + (12 + 27) = (–12 + 12) + 27 Column B: A. commutative property B. associative property C. opposite of a sum property

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I think it would look like this:

A --> opposite of sum
B --> commutative
C --> associative (I'm not quite sure of this one, but I'd rather pick associative than any other property)
D --> associative

Read this excerpt from Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun in which Walter reacts to Beneatha's news that Asagai had asked her to marry him:WALTER. Africa! What he want you to go to Africa for?

BENEATHA. To practice there . . .

WALTER. Girl, if you don't get all them silly ideas out your head! You better marry yourself a man with some loot . . .

BENEATHA. (Angrily, precisely as in the first scene of the play) What have you got to do with who I marry!

WALTER. Plenty. Now I think George Murchison —
Which statement most accurately describes the aesthetic impact of this excerpt?
A. By showing the siblings arguing, the author echoes their contentiousness from the beginning of the play, leaving the reader satisfied.
B. By Walter's telling Beneatha to marry a man with money, the author reinforces what Walter values most at the beginning of the play.
C. By having Walter refer to Beneatha's silly ideas, the author re-emphasizes the search for individuality as a key theme of the play.
D. By having Walter and Beneatha argue, the author leaves the reader feeling disappointed that both still try to divide the family.

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Answer:

A. By showing the siblings arguing, the author echoes their contentiousness from the beginning of the play, leaving the reader satisfied.

Explanation:

In this story, the Youngers are a poor African-American family living on the South Side of Chicago. A chance to escape from neediness comes as a $10,000 disaster protection watch that the authority of the family gets upon her better half's passing. Lena's youngsters, Walter and Beneatha, each have their arrangements for the cash.

The answer is A. By showing the siblings arguing, the author echoes—