Neither. It only signifies a cause-effect relationship is present. The phrases on either side of the 'because' are the cause(s) and the effect(s).
Neither. It only signifies a cause-effect relationship is present. The phrases on either side of the 'because' are the cause(s) and the effect(s).
No correlational study is not cause and effect because correlation does not measure cause.
I THINK THE ANSWER IS YOU CAN USE CAUSE AND EFFECT IN YOUR HYPOTHSIS BECAUSE CAUSE IS SOMETHING AND SOMETHING AND SAME WITH EFFECT
the cause is something that starts something a problem of some sort and an effect is what happens because of the cause its the consequence
Well cause is something that happened or an event that happened for a purpose and an effect is a consequence or something that happens because of the cause.
Some clue words that follow cause and effect include "because," "since," "as a result," and "therefore." These words help to identify the relationship between the cause of an action and its effect.
The cause is "The painter could not sell his paintings" while the effect is "because he loved them very much". The cause is "what" in a statement. The effect could be described as the "why" in a statement.
cause means that WHAT caused that thing to happen and effect means WHY it happend' Edit: Because Mary is hurt, she cannot run that much. Because it is raining, Mary and I will go inside
Mountains cause rain shadow effect because they are tall. The mountains keep out the rain.
The word "because" typically helps to signal cause and effect relationships in an essay.
Because they show the effects that result from a cause or a cause that results from effects
Cause and effect is where you do something and something else happens because of that. For example, if you threw cheese at your freind (cause), he would ask you why you threw cheese at him (effect).