The graph below shows the number of enquiries received by the Tourist Information Office in one city over a six-month period in 2011.
Summarize the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant.
The provided line graph depicts the figure for different types of asking for information that a specific Tourist Information Office received from January to June in 2011.
A glance at the graph reveals that an upward trend is evident in the number of enquiries received in person and by telephone, whereas the amount of questions sent by letter and email exhibited a slight decrease. In the end, asking for information in person was the highest choice.
As presented in the line graph, in January, enquiries received by calls account for the highest number, at over 800 times, followed by letter and email, with just under 800 times. At that time, face-to-face questions was at a low number, only over 400. The number of phonecall questions slightly decreased in February, but quickly increased in March. Similarly, the number of enquiries received in person experienced a moderate increase from over 400 to 800 in March. On the other hand, letter and email questions exhibited a fractional drop.
A quite different picture was presented in April. While asking for information in person increase overwhelmingly and peaked at about 1900 enquiries in June, the number of written type of enquiries fall to by over 300. The amount of phonecall enquiries remain steady from March to April before a significant rise in May and then became the second highest choice of asking for information.
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