Yes, it is true.
In general, elements are the smallest irreducible parts of anything. Elements in math and science are the most basic principles or rudiments of the subject to be learned.
Socialization is not wholly instinctive, it is also learned.
There's something wrong with this question. Everything around us is made out of elements. We can't do anything without using a couple of elements. Oxygen might be a good answer. We use some of that from the moment we draw our first breath. But most elements are mixed up, impure. So maybe this is about which was the first "pure", or refined element humans learned to use.
Nitrous Oxide is not an element, therefore it doesn't have atomic mass. An element is a substance in the form of solid, liquid, gas or metalloid, which can not be broken down anymore. For example, Tin is not an element because it is made up of different elements. Oxygen is just oxygen it is not made out of anything but oxygen atoms. :) BTW I'm a 8th grader that learned this is Science class and made a 102 on the test of the periodic table, elements and the atoms that make them up.
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a compound is what i thank to i learned that in 5th grade.
Do you mean what are the elements of art? Because i learned about those. Hmm, art elements are like different categories of art-like color, shape, texture. They are seperate types of art that make a piece of art look good. That's what i learned
Dalton's atomic theory proposed that all atoms of a particular element are identical, which we now know is not entirely true. Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons, leading to variations in atomic mass. This discovery challenged Dalton's rule of identical atoms for a given element.
The combination of innate behavior and learned behavior is known as a complex behavior. Complex behaviors are influenced by both genetic factors (innate behavior) and environmental factors (learned behavior), resulting in a more intricate and adaptable response to stimuli or situations.
It would be a combination of genetics and learned behavior.
Human behavior is a combination of instinctive and learned responses.
FWIW: Here is one answer I learned working with my father in appliance repair. In older stoves (and probably newer ones) , baking ovens and such, the heating elements at the time consisted of long coiled pieces of nichrome wire that resembled a stretched door spring. These wires were fed through round ceramic doughnut hole type insulator holders mounted on a metal frame. When these elements burned out the element wire would be removed and you could purchase a new one, stretch it out, feed it through all the insulators and terminate the ends to the electrical connector. This was referred to as "Recoiling an element" Later on preformed metal rode type elements were designed and are primarily used today.