Operant coniditioning is shown throughout the entire Bible. Operant conditioning is where we learn to associate actions with consequences. I have an assignment this week in my class that asks this question and I have a few examples I am debating about using. Jonah is one character who received a punishments for his actions and because of his punishments he decided to change his behavior. Adam and Eve is another example of operant conditioning. If you just look in The Bible a little and understand operant conditioning, you will see a lot of examples.
Yes, illustrated can be used as an adjective. For example, an illustrated book. Illustrated is also the past tense of illustrate.
Example sentence - I wrote and illustrated the story book myself.
shown or illustrated by example
It means "showed or illustrated by example".
-The approval of the board's request will lead to an increase in project scope -A change to the scope baseline will probably make changes to cost, quality, and time baselines necessary too
Reflexivity of equality.
"For instance..." "This can be seen when..." "... is one example of ..." "...as illustrated by..." "...as seen in ..." "...which is made apparent when..." these include... for instance... particularly... especially... this is illustrated... note well.... for instance As an example such as e.g.(meaning "exempli gratia") "by way of illustration", "in particular", "as a case in point", "namely", "an example being..."
samson in the bible is a good example
Some example of abstract nouns that are principles are:democracydisciplinefreedomhonestyhonorintegrityjusticelibertyloyaltyvalor
The correct spelling of the word is illustrated (gave an example, or told with images).
Some example of abstract nouns that are principles are:democracydisciplinefreedomhonestyhonorintegrityjusticelibertyloyaltyvalor
In the context of psychology, conditioning refers to a learning process in which a behavior becomes more or less likely to occur as a result of reinforcement or punishment. For example, in classical conditioning, a dog salivating at the sound of a bell after being repeatedly paired with food. In operant conditioning, a child earning a sticker for completing chores and then being more likely to complete chores in the future.