The Book of the Courtier describes how nobles should behave in a royal court.
Castiglione was the writer of this book
No, behave is a verb. The corresponding noun is behaviour.
V. Barclay has written: 'Jane, will you behave'
Conscience.
to describe systematically how people behave under variety of conditionsTo understand why people behave as they doTo predict future employee behaviorto control & develop human activity at work
Seeing the greater picture of society and how society plays a role in how we behave, think, and act.
Ideal culture will always differ from real culture; values and norms do not describe actual behavior, as much as, they describe how much we are supposed to behave. Real culture: what actually happens in everyday life; Ideal culture: how we are supposed to behave based on cultural norms and values.
The generalization about predictable ways in which matter and energy behave is called a scientific law. Scientific laws describe observed phenomena and are based on repeated experimental observations.
Ali Hokin has written: 'How to behave like a princess' -- subject(s): Fiction, Juvenile fiction, Princesses
Yes, fidgeters is an uncommon word. More specifically, it is somewhat of an idiom used to describe one who fidgets (to behave or move restlessly).
In order to have a successful company having a written policy is a must to maintain order. They provide clear written instructions on how employees are expected to behave.
Paul Kupiec has written: 'Do stock prices exhibit excess volatility, frequently deviate from fundamental values and generally behave inefficiently?'