Collectively - all together, as a groupExhaustive - causing fatigue, either mental or physical
Collectively exhaustive means that a set of events or outcomes covers all possible scenarios or possibilities without any overlap. In other words, when all the events in a sample space are considered together, they account for all possible outcomes.
Instructive or educational.
The correct placement of the apostrophe in the phrase "educators society" would be before the "s" at the end, making it "educators' society". This is because the society belongs to the educators collectively.
"Espesyalismo" is a Spanish word that translates to "specialization" in English. It refers to the concept of focusing on a specific area or field of expertise to develop specialized knowledge and skills.
The durable and universally accepted definition of environmental education was developed by the Tbilisi Declaration in 1977. This declaration defines environmental education as a process that aims to develop a world population that is aware of and concerned about the environment and its associated problems, and which has the knowledge, skills, values, motivations, and commitment to work individually and collectively towards solutions.
"Tertiatory" is not a recognized word in the English language. It may be a typographical error or a word that is not commonly used. If you meant "tertiary," this refers to something third in order, level, or importance.
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Your groups should be mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive.
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It is a set of events that, taken together, include all possible outcomes.
No. Unless you meant collectively.
False - if the sentence is meant to be exhaustive. Integers can be positive or negative OR ZERO.
She did exhaustive research in the school library about daisies. Spelling Bee word lists are exhaustive to memorize.
Even after an exhaustive search I never found my keys.
no contract act is not an exhaustive code. oky.
Exhaustive Decoding: When all the address lines of the processor are used to specify the address of a memory location, exhaustive decoding is said to be used
It is correct to say "such an exhausting day", and not 'Such an exhaustive day'.
A set of events is said to be exhaustive if, between them, they cover all possible outcomes.