Respuesta :

The quantity or complete absence of the thing being measured is represented by the zero point.

Ex. Because the zero point is set arbitrarily and does not indicate the complete absence of temperature, the Fahrenheit scale is an interval scale.

What exactly is a random zero point?

Zero degrees on either scale is not a "true" zero because it is an arbitrary number. The absence of temperature does not occur at the zero point; It's just a random number on the scale. Other examples of common interval scales include: Age and SAT scores (one is culturally determined).

Which scale has a point at zero?

In addition, on a ratio scale, the distance between two variables is also the same. Furthermore, a proportion scale has a genuine zero point, meaning the worth of zero isn't erratic.

To learn more about zero point here:

https://brainly.com/question/13265624

#SPJ4