"Quartine" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A word that seems to be a rare or variant form of the word "quarantine".
Quarantine:
1. A period of 21 days during which a person or animal suspected of carrying a contagious disease is kept in isolation or confined in order to prevent the spread of the disease.
2. A period of time during which something, especially a product or a ship, is kept separate from others in order to check whether it causes any harm.
3. A restricted period or state of being isolated from others.
A group of four people, animals, or things considered together because of their connections or characteristics.
Quartets refer to groups of four people or things. It can refer to:<br><br>1. A musical term for a composition for four performers or instruments.<br>2. In music, a type of string quartet, often composed of two violins, a viola, and a cello.<br>3. In dance, a close group of four performers.<br>4. In sports, a group of four players or teams, often competing against each other.<br>5. In a broader sense, four things or people working together or closely related to each other.<br><br>For example: "The quartet performed a beautiful rendition of Beethoven's string quartet." or "The four friends made a quartet, which participated in the community theater."
Quartile refers to one of the three equal parts that divide a data set or distribution into four parts, based on the data values or frequencies. <br><br>The quartiles are typically denoted by the letters Q1, Q2, and Q3, and represent: <br><br>1. Q1 (First Quartile): The middle 25% of the data, below which 25% of the data points lie. It is also known as the 25th percentile.<br>2. Q2 (Second Quartile), also known as the Median: The middle value in the data set, where half of the data points are below it and half above it.<br>3. Q3 (Third Quartile): The middle 75% of the data, above which 25% of the data points lie. It is also known as the 75th percentile.<br><br>Quartiles are used to understand the distribution and spread of data, and can help in identifying patterns, outliers, and skewness in a data set.
In statistics, the quartiles are values that divide a data set into four equal parts, or quarters, containing approximately 25% of the data in each part. The three quartiles are:<br><br>1. <strong>First quartile (Q1)</strong>: The value below which 25% of the data falls.<br>2. <strong>Second quartile (Q2)</strong>: The value below which 50% of the data falls, and the median of the data set.<br>3. <strong>Third quartile (Q3)</strong>: The value below which 75% of the data falls.<br><br>Quartiles are often used to summarize a data set and can provide a rough idea of the distribution of data.