Scientists often find that quantitative observation is more important than qualitative observation.
A quantitative observation is something that measures a quantity (number), such as the weight of length of an object. Quantitative observations have numbers, such as 3 pounds or 5 meters. The opposite is a qualitative observation, such as something is round or that it is blue. There are no numbers involved, the thing is either round or it's not.
A quantitative observation can observe numerical information, a control, non numerical information, and a system. A quantitative observation is observed through looking at things.
Try a sentence with the phrase "capitol city"
Quantitative means quantity, or number as opposed to qualitative observation, a quality or characteristic. You could observe that there are four sheep in a pasture, or that twelve of the twenty participants (60%) in a study preferred chocolate milk.
yes (alternative answer) "cachet integrity" is not a sentence, it is a phrase, and the meaning of that phrase is not particularly clear, either.
I was caught napping.
Unusual is spelled with three u's. That's unusual. What an unusual observation. That's an unusual observation deck.
any tool that measures - a ruler, a soundmeter, a photometer, a geiger counter, etc. Plus, some way to record the observation, such as perncil and paper, or recording strips ( like the things you see EKGs printed on)
"Jump on the bandwagon" IS a sentence.
"to the movies" is a prepositional phrase.
I could answer that question if you were to phrase it a bit differently. They were to arrive hours ago.
Sure! A partial phrase is a group of words that does not form a complete sentence on its own. For example, "in the morning" is a partial phrase because it lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.