Left-Skewed is the answer.
Histograms are a very common method of visualizing data, and that means that understanding how to interpret histograms is a valuable and important skill in virtually any career. There are a number of things to pay particular attention to when reading a histogram.
Bell-Shaped: A histogram with a prominent ‘mound’ in the center and similar tapering to the left and right. One indication of this shape is that the data is unimodal – meaning that the data has a single mode, identified by the ‘peak’ of the curve.
Uniform: A uniform-shaped histogram indicates data that is very consistent; the frequency of each class is very similar to that of the others.
Right-Skewed: A right-skewed histogram has a peak that is left of the center and a more gradual tapering to the right side of the graph.
Left-Skewed: A left-skewed histogram has a peak to the right of the center, more gradually tapering to the left side. It is unimodal, with the mode closer to the right and greater than either mean or median.
Undefined Bimodal: This shape is not specifically defined, but we can note regardless that it is bi-modal, having two separate classes or intervals equally representing the maximum frequency of the distribution.
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