Some modern day examples of mass hysteria include the "Momo Challenge" panic in 2018 where parents feared their children were being targeted by a dangerous online challenge, the clown sightings frenzy in 2016 when people reported sightings of creepy clowns threatening communities, and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic leading to panic buying and misinformation spreading rapidly online.
Some words that rhyme with bacteria are cafeteria and hysteria.
Movies, and plays.
to work the gun
hahaha
to work the gun
Examples of air that has mass include the air we breathe, the air in balloons, and the air inside a tire. All air contains molecules and atoms that contribute to its mass.
Some examples of medieval names for places around the world include Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul), Londinium (modern-day London), and Byzantium (modern-day Istanbul).
modern fuels are those fuels that are used and are now found. some examples of these are- biogas.
The definition for continental is relating to a land mass.
Mass hysteria is a condition in which many people are simulataniously affected by anxiety that is often extreme and unfounded. This condition is also known as collective hysteria, epidemic anxiety, group hysteria, mass psychogenic illness, or collective obsssional behavior.Mass hysteria was recognized during the latter part of the Middle Ages when whole groups of people were affected by similar anxieties- such as dance manias involving raving, jumping, and convulsions. Some thought they had been bitten by a tarantula and would jump up and dance in the street. This activity became known as tarantism in Italy and St. Vitus's Dance in the rest of Europe.In the 1950's there was a mass hysteria incident in the state of Washington involving pitting of auto windshields. Groups of people feared that the normal phenomenon had actually developed from airborne radioactive material.The American citizenry as a whole came very near mass hysteria in the days immediately following 9/11, but managed to restrain itself in the end.Source: Doctor, Ronald M., Ph.D, and Kahn, Ada P., Ph.D. Phobias, Fears, and Anxieties, Second edition. Facts on File (New York, NY). 2000.
Some examples are kilogram, gram, and milligram.
<p>Debeers, Microsoft<p>