your mam
No, the normal curve is not the meaning of the Normal distribution: it is one way of representing it.
Height is an example of a normal curve. Most people will be around average height, with some being short or tall, and very few being very short or very tall.
In mathematics, "on" typically refers to a specific value or position within a set or context. For instance, in the context of functions, "on" can indicate the domain or a particular point where a function is evaluated. It may also denote a relationship, such as a point being "on" a line or curve, meaning it satisfies the equation defining that line or curve.
The point when a curve changes from concave upward to concave downward is called the inflection point. It is the point where the curve transitions from being curved "upwards" to being curved "downwards" or vice versa. At the inflection point, the rate of change of the curve's curvature changes sign.
Yes, the radius of curvature of a curve can be infinite. This occurs at points where the curve is straight, meaning there is no curvature at that point. For example, a straight line has an infinite radius of curvature because it does not bend. In mathematical terms, a curve with a constant slope (like a linear function) will have an infinite radius of curvature throughout its length.
In a business sense, it usually means a new employee is not quite keeping up with the 'learning curve' required to perform a particular job. In other instances it would mean 'off the pace' or 'behind schedule'. The origin of the phrase refers to the statistical bell shaped curve also called the normal probability distribution; where to be 'behind the curve' is to be analogously in area of the graph to the left of the bell curve, to be 'ahead of the curve' analogously in the area of the graph to the right of the bell curve.
how i do curve line
It means that someone has mixed up three different expressions. One is "to be put behind the eight ball," which is an allusion to the game of pool, meaning to be placed in an awkward, difficult or untenable position. The second expression is to "throw someone a curve ball," which is an allusion to the game of baseball, meaning to suddenly introduce unexpected difficulties for someone. Third is to be "behind the curve," an allusion to graphs, meaning not at the leading edge of things, out of it, slow or stupid. As to what the sentence is TRYING to mean, that's anyone's guess. Maybe its intended meaning is He really dropped the ball that time, or He messed up hugely there.
Law of demand is behind the downward sloping of demand curve,i.e. inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded.
No, the normal curve is not the meaning of the Normal distribution: it is one way of representing it.
Elasticity varies along a straight-line demand curve by being different at different points. At the top of the curve, elasticity is more elastic, meaning small changes in price lead to larger changes in quantity demanded. At the bottom of the curve, elasticity is less elastic, meaning changes in price have less impact on quantity demanded.
Good day, I would like to know the relevance of OFFER CURVE to applied microeconomics.
No. Scoliosis is a sideways curve of the spine. Mine looks like the letter S from behind.
The combining form meaning curve is the prefix scoli/o The combining form meaning curve is the prefix scoli/o
Indifference curve is a curve. A curve that is being intersected with the budget line. In order to show the maximum satisfaction. Dave Ono:
a series of curve lines
Area under curve