In the contest between Smiley's frog and the stranger's frog, Smiley's frog ultimately loses when it fails to jump as expected. The stranger's frog, which is more agile and performs better, wins the contest. This outcome highlights themes of deception and the unpredictability of competition, as Smiley was confident in his frog's abilities but was outmatched. The story serves as a reminder that appearances can be misleading.
In the story "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" by Mark Twain, the outcome of the contest between Smiley's frog and the stranger's frog is that the stranger's frog wins because it has been secretly filled with lead pellets, making it unable to jump. This results in Smiley losing the bet and the stranger leaving with the winnings.
exit polling
Upshot
A contest is more like a sunset as it represents the end of a process or event, with a winner or outcome determined afterward. A cloud is more passive and does not involve competition or a judgment of success or failure.
The outcome was that the colinist won. The outcome was that the colinist won.
The treatment effect is the difference between the observed outcome and the "normal" outcome
The treatment effect is the difference between the observed outcome and the "normal" outcome
Stargirl wins, but when she goes home, only Dori and a couple teachers are there to meet her.
The difference between output and outcome is that , output is the product or service that comes out of a process and outcome is the net result of that output to the organization.
Typical is an expected outcome; atypical would be an unexpected outcome.
A cousin can contest a will but only if by winning the contest, the cousins will inherit a part of the estate that they would not inherit under the will. In short, the cousins have to have "standing" to contest a will. "Standing" generally means having some kind of stake in the outcome of the case. As an example, assume the will gives everything to the decedent's children and that if the will were set aside the children would get the estate anyway by intestacy or perhaps by an earlier will, then the cousins may not challenge the will because they get nothing even if they are successful. Another situation is if the cousins are the only heirs of a decedent, but the decedent's will gives everything to other people, then they can sue. It is not the status as "cousin" that determines whether they may contest the will. Standing confers that right. Standing comes from having a stake in the outcome of the will contest.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.