Chapter 4 (sections 1-4)

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Across
  1. 1. Part of the repair or damages that a driver has to pay before the insurance company pays.
  2. 7. Insurance coverage that pays for damage a driver causes to another person’s property.
  3. 8. A pictorial display in which sets re re-presented as circles enclosed by a rectangle representing the universal set.
  4. 10. A rectangular array used to depict a relationship between two categorical (qualitative) variables.
  5. 11. The outcome of an experiment.
  6. 12. A type of insurance that covers a person from damages; most states set minimum liability requirements.
  7. 19. A percentage paid to the government of sales on products or services.
  8. 21. The difference between the upper and lower quartiles; found by subtracting Q3 − Q1.
  9. 23. An added type of insurance coverage mandatory in some states that pays for any physical injuries that the driver or the passengers sustain while in the vehicle, even if there is no traffic accident; sometimes called no-fault insurance.
  10. 27. A type of insurance coverage that pays for towing or road service when a car is disabled.
  11. 28. Covers personal injury if a driver is at fault in an accident.
  12. 29. The probability that an event will occur given than another event has already occurred.
Down
  1. 2. A type of insurance that pays for part of the cost of a rented car if a car is disabled because of a collision or comprehensive-covered repair.
  2. 3. A type of insurance that pays for the repair or replacement of an insured car if it is damaged in a collision with another vehicle or object, or if it overturns, no matter who is at fault. This type of insurance is usually required if there is a loan on the car.
  3. 4. On a graph, where two curves or lines with different slopes meet.
  4. 5. Coverage that pays for injuries to a driver or passengers caused by a driver who has no insurance or does not have enough insurance to cover the medical losses.
  5. 6. A request for payment from an insurance company by a policy holder.
  6. 9. Describes two events in which the probability of one occurring is unaffected by the occurrence of the other event.
  7. 13. The possibility that an event will occur, described by a real number between 0 and 1 inclusive.
  8. 14. At fault for damages caused.
  9. 15. A statistician who provides information about risks in financial situations. They assist insurance companies in setting their rates.
  10. 16. A set of events which are not independent.
  11. 17. Three values represented by Q1, Q2, and Q3 that divide the distribution into four subsets that each contains 25% of the data.
  12. 18. A type of insurance that covers the repair or replacement of parts of an insured car damaged by vandalism, fire, flood, wind, earthquakes, missiles, falling objects, riots, tree sprays, and other disasters; it also covers if the car is stolen.
  13. 20. A contract between a driver and an insurance company, where the driver agrees to pay a fee (called the premium) and the company agrees to cover certain accident-related costs when the driver makes a claim (request for payment).
  14. 22. Same as PIP, or personal injury protection.
  15. 24. Responsible for damages caused.
  16. 25. An extra fee paid to an automobile insurance company for dividing an annual premium into monthly, quarterly, or semiannual payments.
  17. 26. The amount paid for an insurance policy.