anything that can be mesured
temperature
Quantitative means having numbers and measurements. qualitatitive does not. Qualitative Example: mix hydrogen and oxygen and you get water. Quantitative Example: mix two moles of Hydrogen and one mole of Oxygen to get one mole of water.
The opposite is a quantitative observation, such as the weight or length of an object. Quantitative observations have numbers, such as 3 pounds or 5 meters. You would be quantifying or measuring a thing.
They are variables that can take quantitative - as opposed to qualitative values. For example, the colour of peoples' eyes is a qualitative variable, but their age or shoe size are quantitative variables.
An example of quantitative data: A man is stocking a lemonade stand. He has 40 lemons. They are 5 inches tall. This is quantitative data, using numbers to describe an object whilst QUALITATIVE data is when you OBSERVE, such as: The lemons are yellow and bumpy. They are also sour.
Colligative Properties
Yes, qualitative property is an example of density. The amount of matter in a given substance will determine whether it will be dense or not.
Any property of an object that can be measured and given a numerical value. A girls weight and height are quantitative properties. But her good looks is not a quantitative property, even though people try like "on a scale from 1 to 10. Its still not measurable.
It is a quantitative property because a substance toxic level can be measured and assigned a value Save
It is a physical property
Size can be a qualitative property of matter, meaning we observe it with our 5 senses. A more exact measurement can be made, such as the length, mass, weight, or volume of matter. These are considered quantitative properties, or measurable properties.
matter
It is a quantitative property because a substance toxic level can be measured and assigned a value Save
Reactivity is the chemical property.
Oxidation Flammability
Quantitative observations were made to describe the dimensions of the property.
give me an example of quantitative research in sociology