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The chart illustrates how many people listen to a radio station in

America from 5 a.m to 12 p.m.


Overall, the number of people tuning in for programs provided by this
station from Monday to Friday was almost higher than that of those
coming on Saturday, with its speak time being at early morning and late
afternoon.
From Monday to Friday, the number of people listening to the station
radio reached the peak at 7 o’clock, with the figure being nearly 1
million. Subsequently, the figure plummeted dramatically to 600
thousands two hours later, after which it hovers around 500 thousands,
before soaring to 800 thousands at 4 p.m. After that, despite some
fluctutations, a decrease was observed in the station’s average audience
figure until no figure was recorded at 23:00.
The Saturday followed that same pattern, albeit at a lower extent. After
peaking at about 650 thousands at 8 a.m, the audience figures fell
significantly before striking again to north of 600 thousands at 5 p.m,
and a gradual decline to almost 0 at the end of the period.
The chart compares the prices of banana in four countries namely Japan,
France, Germany, and the USA from 1994 to 2004.
Overall, there was an increase in the costs of bananas per kilogram in
Japan and the USA, while the figure for the two remaining countries
remained relatively stable throughout the period examined. It is also
important to note that Japan sold bananas with the highest price in
almost years researched, except for the year 2001; whereas the banana
sold in the USA was consistently cheaper than other countries.
In 1994, the USA’s banana prices was by far the smallest, with the
figure being under $1 per kilogram. Subsequently, the prices rose up by
$1 after one year, after which it hovered around one dollar before
ending the period at just a north of $1. Similar trend, but to a much
greater extent, was witnessed in the value of bananas sold in Japan.
Starting at nearly $2, the figure for a kilogram of bananas reached a
peak at nearly $3 in 1995, after which it plummeted dramatically to $2
and hovering around this price in the next five years. The banana price
then experienced a sharp decline to just appoximately $1.5 in 2001,
before recovering to $2.5 at the end of the period.
Turning to France, there was a period of stability in the price of
bananas, remaining at roughly 1.7 US follars per remaining at roughly 1.7 US
dollars per kilogram from 1994 to 1997. Thereafter, the figure fluctuated wildly, with it becoming the
highest in the chart in 2001 (at $1.7) and the lowest in 2003 (at $1) prior to reaching just over 1.5 in 2004.
The banana costs in Germany almost exactly mirrored this fluctuating trend, hovering around the 1.4 US

dollar mark in the first seven years and then falling gradually to about 1.2 in 2004.

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