Almost all of living things??
Is that correct?
Sorry if doesnt make sense :(
The correct answers are validity; reliability.
Answer 1: <span>The ability of a test to measure what is purports to measure is called validity.</span> Validity is defined as the ability of a test or study to actually to measure what it claims to measure. For instance, if a test aims to measure a population sample's heart rate, but ends up measuring blood sugar levels instead, it does not have validity, since it did not measure what it claimed or set out to measure. <span>
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Answer 2: Reliability refers<span> to the consistency of test results.</span> Reliability can be defines as the ability of a test or measure to consistently produce the same results at different, times, settings or locations. If the same test or measure produces different outcomes or results at different times or locations, it is low in reliability.
The answer is containing nomination campaign and general election campaign. In addition, one strategy that campaigns use to switch the media is staging media events. The aptitude of an office holder to fend off challengers is recognized as the scare-off effect. The federal election directive is the bureaucratic agency in custody of monitoring campaign activity.
Answer:
The answer is D. It made it less time consuming and saved workers energy.