Yes it depends on what you are measuring in your study. some examples of variable include age, sex, marital status among others
One possible opposite of a numerical scale is a "nominal" scale. In the study of statistics, we use four "scales of measurement": nominal; ordinal; interval; ratio. The "nominal," scale, which simply names categories, is, in a sense, non-numerical. On "nominal" scales, people or objects with the same attribute are assigned the same scale-value. Examples of categories on nominal scales are ethnicity, gender, marital status, styles of housing, models of cars. For example, a nominal scale of "marital status" might be numbered as follows: 1. Single, never married. 2. Single, previously married. 3. Married. Although we may count the number of people (or items) in each category, the numerals assigned to the "nominal" scale have no 'numeric' meaning in the way that we usually think about numbers. On that view, a nominal scale may be said to be non-numerical and, therefore, the opposite of a numerical scale. Actually, integers form a subset of numbers, not the other way around.
Limited use status
It determined a person's status under the black codes.
It granted Puerto Ricans partial US citizenship status
married and had sex all night long
palmer marital status
Yes, marital status is nominal data.
because abdi is a nerd and he fails all his classes
Yes, marital status is nominal data.
Why an individual's marital status has an effect on disease
by showing that marital status has not much but something to do with the government.
by showing that marital status has not much but something to do with the government.
Marital status means, simply, whether or not you are married.
No.
One's capacity for empathy and compassion is not typically affected by marital status. These traits are tied to one's personality and character, rather than their relationship status.
Apex will find you