Yes, it is.
In qualitative variables, nominal data involves categories with no inherent order, such as colors or types of fruit. Ordinal data, on the other hand, includes categories that have a meaningful order or ranking, such as education levels or customer satisfaction ratings.
spearman rhos
There are many ways of categorising variables. One classification, used in statistics, is Nominal, Ordinal and Interval.
nominal and ordinal is wrong; those are the two types of qualitative variables. Ratio and interval are the two types of quantitative variables.
spearman's rho
Either an Interval or an Ordinal Scale
Chi Square
Chi Square
Three, they are: Constant,dependant, & controlled. Alternatively, you can say there are 4: nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio.
Nominal or category;Ordinal scale;Interval scale; andRatio scale.
Ordinal data has an inherent order, i.e. ranking, in its possible values. For example 'poor, fair, good, excellent' is ordinal becaused there is an assumption that the four possible values are higher from one to the next. It can be coded as 1,2,3,4 but there is no assumption of equal spacing. Nominal data has no inherent ranking, only labeling-e.g. 'apple, strawberry, orange'. The choices are three levels with no assumed value. Any numerical coding does not reflect any quantitative meaning. Georgette Asherman, Direct Effects, LLC
"sixteenth" is an ordinal number. There is no ordinal number for an ordinal number!