Want this question answered?
Null hypotheses state that there is no relationship between select variables. For example, there is no relationship between personality and alcoholism.
A hypothesis is like an educated guess before an experiment is conducted. For example, when boiling water, it would be possible to hypothesize that the higher the temperature, the faster the water will boil.
An operational definition of a variable is that which defines a variable in terms of operations that are used to measure it. This allows different investigators to perform the same or similar experiments when investigating a phenomenon. For example, a score on a standardized IQ (i.e., intelligence quotient) test might be the operational definition of the variable "intelligence."
Operational
There are infinite sources of potential hypotheses. Usually one begins with an empirically-verifiable proposition or statement from a theory and formalises it into a hypothesis for testing. For example: Theory - (Marx) all of history is driven by class-conflict fermenting into revolutions. Hypothesis - all else equal, we would expect there to be many revolutions in history.
a example of a hypothesis is saying i can conclude that....
No.
one example is: My hypothesis has a conclusion....
A hypothesis is an "educated guess". An example of how it could be used: John needed to test his hypothesis about molecular degenaration.
a negatively stated hypothesis. example: the application of horse manure has no significant effect!
A hypothesis is actually a "proposed explanation" of observed phenomena which can be tested for accuracy. For example: Spines on cacti reduce herbivore damage
An example of an instruction from the Scientific Method is creating a hypothesis.
the juvenile system
A hypothesis is a guess about what will happen in an experiment. For example, "If I burn these cloths, then cotton will burn fastest."
A hypothesis just needs a little proof in order to become an accepted fact. That's a fine hypothesis, Smedley!
A hypothesis
hypothesis