Given : a% of x is equal to b% of y
\(\rightarrow ax=by\)
\(\rightarrow y=\frac{ax}{b}\)
Multiplying both sides with \(\frac{c}{100}\)
\(\rightarrow \frac{c}{100}\times y =(\frac{c}{100})\times(\frac{ax}{b})\)
\(\rightarrow c\%\) of \(y \) is \((\frac{ac}{b})\%\) of \(x\)
The correct answer is (B) : ac/b%
List-I | List-II |
---|---|
(A) Confidence level | (I) Percentage of all possible samples that can be expected to include the true population parameter |
(B) Significance level | (III) The probability of making a wrong decision when the null hypothesis is true |
(C) Confidence interval | (II) Range that could be expected to contain the population parameter of interest |
(D) Standard error | (IV) The standard deviation of the sampling distribution of a statistic |