The two charts illustrate the rate of international students in the USA, the UK, Australia and Canada, and how it changed in 8 years.The table presents the total percentage.
The chart depicts the expenditure used on six consumer goods such as Photographic films, toys, CDs, perfumes, tennis racquets and personal stereos in four countries, namely Britain, France, Italy and Germany.
The presented table and bar chart provide details about foreign students in English-speaking countries from 2004 to 2012. The four countries are the USA, UK, Australia and Canada.
The provided pie charts show the reasons why people leave and stay in the UK. There are five reasons which are joining a family/friends, the language, the employment, financial reasons and the life quality.
The bar chart illustrates how much money was spent on six products in Britain ,France ,Italy and Germany. Overall Britain consumed larger amount in all the goods considered compared to other three countries however Germa
The first pie graph illustrates data regarding the division of reasons which lead the UK residents to leave their country. The second chart demonstrates the proportional amount of people who choose to stay in the United
The display pie chart describes the reason why people left the UK for other countries and why people stayed in the UK. The below information in given in %. The reason are Joint family/friends, language, employment, finan
The bar chart provided the number of the expense on six consumer goods in four countries in European. Overall, Photographic film and Toys provided the highest amount of expenditure. On the other hand, Tennis racquets and
The provided bar diagram demonstrates the energy generated by wind power in four main nations, including India, Denmark, Germany, and the United States from 1985 to 2000. Overall, in the given time, the US had the highes
The given bar graph illustrates the information about the wind-power production of four different countries (India, Denmark, Germany, and the United States) between 1985 and 2000.
The data provided in the form of a bar chart illustrates how many students moved to English-speaking countries for study in two years, 2004 and 2012, while the table copmares the foreign students as percentage of total