it refers to the quality of something ... quantitative refers to quantity, just for your info (data that doesn't involve numbers) Or, for a more detailed answer: "Qualitative" refers to the kind, but not or only very inexactly to the magnitude. "Quantitatively" refers to the magnitude (number, size, weight etc.), but not to the kind. Both of these properties (quality and quantity) are independent of each other. For example: If you have a box full of red and blue marbles, you can qualitatively say that there are red and blue ones, but you cannot say how much of them. You only can say that there is more than one of each kind. If it is dark, you can count them, and you can quantitatively say how much pieces you have. But you wouldn't know, how much of them are blue, and how much of them are red.
Qualitatively refers to a type of research without numbers, but observation. Researchers must be involved constantly in data collection and analysis and communicate their results and conclusions based on their direct observations.
No, not quantitatively, not qualitatively.
It exists in liquid qualitatively alter the nature of transition.
data or information that is measured numerically rather than qualitatively.
iron reacts with air to form rust
It's sodium cyanohidridoborate; qualitatively detect the carbonyl functionality of a ketone or aldehyde functional group.
formulska jednika 1 molekule zeljeza i 1 molekule kisika
tasteful flavourful In chemistry the tastes are defined qualitatively viz sweet, sour, bitteretc. and when there is no taste it is called tasteless.
Greater level of happiness. Attractive Increased. Qualitatively superior lifestyle to those who do not drink caffeine.
Empirical research is a method of gaining knowledge through indirect and direct experience and observation. Empirical evidence can be analyzed qualitatively or quantitatively.
law of dna conctancy implies that all cells in a lineage contain genetic information which in both qualitatively and quantitatively identical.
Investigate the phenomenon thoroughly, quantitavely as well as qualitatively, and publish his results appropriately.
You cannot "measure" initiative because it is a characteristic or quality of behaviour with no numerical basis. You can assess an individual's initiative by, for example, qualitatively gauging the efficiency and success of that person in solving a problem by it.