The bar chart illustrates how often people in the USA use fast food for their meals in three years: 2003, 2006 and 2013. The biggest amount in these three years were once a week and once or twice a month.
The graphs below illustrate the 2 different reasons for which students in various age groups study, namely for career and for interest. It also shows how much support they gained from their employers for their education.
The pie charts compare proportional garments pending in terms of arts in 1995 and 2005. The table compares the number of people in terms of participation in arts events.
The chart delineates the annual expenditure of UK citizens belonging to different age groups in three categories: food and drink, restaurants and hotels, and entertainment.
The two diagrams below depict information on the activities of UK graduate and postgraduate students who did not have a full-time job after graduating from college in 2008.
The bar graph illustrates the quantity of power that had been produced by windmills in India, Denmark, Germany, and the United States between 1985 and 2000.
The bar chart illustrates, in thousands, the amount of adults engaging in main sports including tennis, basketball, cricket, golf, swimming, football and rugby in a specific zone, in 1997 and 2017.
The bar chart gave an informtion on three differents types of catergories between a differents group of age which are populations who are living in The UK in a year of 2004
These charts illustrate the changes of electrical devices' ownership and number of hours doing housework in one country within period of time from 1920 to 2019.
Presented for consideration is a bar chart illustrating the estimation of the illiteracy rate around the world in various regions in the previous year.
The line graph represents the proportion of crime happen in three disparate regions in New York city center over the period ten decade starting between 2002 to 2012
The given bar graph illustrates information about proportions of costs for different categories, such as food, housing facilities, transportation, health care and clothing.