Well it is simple, if you cannot prove that the article's statement is true than that is bias. For example if the article says : "Simon Cowell is a wizard with music" then that would be bias because we cannot prove that the statement is true.
(Apex) Rosewood is the prettiest town in the state of Colorado.
I prefer
A simple example of a conditional statement is: If a function is differentiable, then it is continuous. An example of a converse is: Original Statement: If a number is even, then it is divisible by 2. Converse Statement: If a number is divisible by 2, then it is even. Keep in mind though, that the converse of a statement is not always true! For example: Original Statement: A triangle is a polygon. Converse Statement: A polygon is a triangle. (Clearly this last statement is not true, for example a square is a polygon, but it is certainly not a triangle!)
A problem statement would be the beginning of an experiment or essay. For example, the problem may be how to grow plants during the winter.
I'm guessing this is a probability question. A die (or coin, or spinner, or roulette wheel, or other method of choosing something randomly) is fair if each possibility (1,2,3,4,5,6) has an equal chance of coming up. Anything that isn't fair is biased. For example a die that has been weighted to make 6s come up is biased.
it was an objective and biased statement in the point of view of those who wrote it.
(Apex) Rosewood is the prettiest town in the state of Colorado.
a biased statement is when the answer isn't "the truth" ot fair. It is the opposite of unbiased.
it was an objective and biased statement in the point of view of those who wrote it.
it was an objective and biased statement in the point of view of those who wrote it.
it was an objective and biased statement in the point of view of those who wrote it.
In math, a biased example could be when, someone asks only males to answer "do you like this product." its when the people chosen to answer the survey/sample is not random
stereotyping. stereo typing is a way of biased thinking so thinking that just because some is asian means their smart is a way of stereo typing
You can tell that an author's statement is biased if it uses what is referred to as marketing language. This means that, rather than give facts about the plot and character development of the writing, the author instead praises the writing or tries to sell the reader on purchasing it.
Asking about the shopping behaviour to people in a mall.
Biased- (Not random) Unbiased-(Random) Example: (ubbiased) Woman takes random people to take a survey.
I think that Hannah Montana is not a good singer.