"I, he, she, we, they, who" are pronouns used in the subjective case.
The pronouns "you" and "it" can serve as both subjective and objective pronouns.
The subjective tense of "lie" is "lay." The subjective forms of the verb "to lie" are "lie" (present tense) and "lay" (past tense).
The pronouns "I, we, she, they, and he" are personal pronouns.A personal pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.I = first person, singular, subjective;we = first person, plural, subjective;she = third person, singular, subjective;they = third person, plural, subjective;he = third person, singular, subjective.
A verb can be in a subjective mood when it use to express something that is doubtful.
Quantitative means it can be measured. Qualitative is something that is subjective meaning there is no way to really measure it. Example: Quantitative: 2=2=4 This is always true. Qualitative: Puppies are cute. (this is only an opinion. No facts)
Qualitative observation is subjective. Quantitative observation is the result of controlled testing procedures with prescribed procedures in place. Quantitative testing is sometimes called empirical testing.
informal reseach
Quantitative observations are observations that can be precisely measured. Qualitative observations, meanwhile, are subjective observations that are based on the characteristics of what is being observed.
Qualitative has to do with quality and can be subjective. Quantitative has to do with quantity and is measured in numbers. Qualitative data deals with descriptions of what you can see, such as colors, smells, tastes, etc. It can be seen, but not measured. Quantitative data deals with numbers, such as length, height, area, volume, weight, speed, time, temperature, humidity, sound levels, cost, members, ages, etc.
Observations can be Quantitative and or Qualitative. Quantitative observations are made objectively and are measurements and factual observations. eg "The plank is 3 feet long and rough sawn".Qualitative observations are subjective and may not be factual. eg. "The plank is a pretty colour and feels furry".
qualitative
qualitative
No, qualitative research is subjectiveplacing excessive emphasis on one's own moods, attitudes, opinions - Miriam Webster dictionary.Particular to a given person; personal: subjective experience.- American Heritage Dictionaryhttp://wilderdom.com/research/QualitativeVersusQuantitativeResearch.html - gives a great table on the differences.
Quantitative research is generally more related to physics and "measuring" results which can often be expressed as numbers, and are reproducible using the scientific method: "45% of the people tested prefer product A, 37% prefer product C" "light travels at 2.997m/s" Qualitative research is more related to things that cannot be easily measured or proven, such as why people do certain things.
Qualitative QualitativeInfluencing and negotiatingQualitative and Quantitative Qualitative and QuantitativeQualitative and QuantitativeQualitativefalse Quantitative Skillsqualitative Qualitative Qualitative Qualitative 5qualitative qualitativeAll of the aboveNo/FALSE
A qualitative or subjective observation is an observation which uses evidence gathered from one of the five senses i.e. color, texture, taste, etc as opposed to a quantitative or objective observation which describes something using numbers.Examples of qualitative observations:"The coat is green.""The dog is soft.""The coffee is bitter."Examples of quantitative observations:"There are 4 computers in the classroom.""There are 7 cookies in the jar.""There are 5 stripes on her dress."