In this study, memoirs and diaries, account books and statistics are used to forge an image of the life that went on in these houses. |
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Mayo, making telling use of their superior fitness, lost no time in giving the scoreboard statistics a satisfying aspect. |
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I'll need to look into this further, but they make a strong enough case to make me question my uncritical acceptance of these statistics. |
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And actually, the statistics show that the number of child abductions has not gone up. |
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As National Aboriginal Day dawns Monday, the statistics for aboriginal youth remain depressing. |
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It is clear from the above-stated statistics that the presence of multinationals has not boosted the country's wealth creation objective. |
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It alerts the employee's manager and supplies statistics about absence to the council. |
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Sport is played not through statistics, but through raw passion, ungirdled emotion and pure unadulterated spirit. |
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Most are unknown to authorities and unaccounted for in statistics, seeming to have disappeared and be living on the edges of society. |
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Alan was one of the first paleontologists to integrate multivariate statistics into morphometric studies. |
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But road statistics are volatile, and experts say the 16 per cent drop in deaths last year could prove to be a blip rather than a trend. |
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Whichever statistics you look at, the county's schools sit more or less in the middle. |
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At present there seems to be a significant disparity in the statistics that are being reported. |
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When the scoresheet is blank and the incident at a premium, the search is for statistics. |
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Although there are no official statistics, the turnover rate of staff in low-skilled jobs in the Civil Service is believed to be quite high. |
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Shocking statistics released this week have indicated that this town is among the country's top accident black spots. |
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The actors and models have a facility to update pictures, even include a showreel and view statistics of pictures sent to talent hunters. |
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Descriptive statistics such as frequencies and modal categories were then calculated for each variable. |
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He points to statistics showing that white cops kill fewer blacks than black cops do. |
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In these graphs, vertical error bars represent 1 standard deviation, calculated from binomial statistics on the number of visits. |
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All this only scratches the surface of the ways schools use statistics to mislead parents and the public. |
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The statistics show 8,600 farmers shut up shop and 6,600 farm workers left the industry in the 12 months to June this year. |
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The descriptive statistics vary with number of samples, and tribometers report average friction values based on different sample sizes. |
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Schools cannot continue to turn a blind eye in light of these new shocking statistics. |
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As boss of these papers, such parlous statistics should be concentrating his mind wonderfully. |
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These frightening statistics speak for themselves and behind these figures there lie terrible human tragedies and unimaginable suffering. |
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The location of speed cameras is based on the collation and evaluation of road traffic accident casualty statistics over a three-year period. |
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Just a few days ago, the Detroit Free Press published statistics on the income of residents of the city's midtown area. |
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As one of his biographers noted, the statistics of his benefactions alone are mind-numbing. |
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The methodology is case studies which, although mainly historical in format, do periodically furnish topologies and descriptive statistics. |
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You can get latest news, comment pieces on topical issues, a list of events, and lots of statistics on the region. |
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The Other Physical Sciences category includes geology, geography, hydrology, statistics, meteorology, and physics. |
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As the treacherous winter months lie ahead, let's not wait for more alarming statistics to bring us to our senses. |
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Such statistics suggest a date in Tampa in January beckons, with the NFL West title already appearing to be a mere formality. |
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While these statistics offer positive information for university graduates, the survey response rate is extremely discouraging. |
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Because statistics show that the menially impaired are the most likely to be abused, all doors have porthole windows. |
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But it's no more mendacious than a bunch of other tendentious uses of statistics that are the common coin of political debate today. |
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If we are to be given statistics, they should be in full and complete, not edited highlights. |
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But seeing the actual footage, with the minutes ticking by, may prove more damaging to the White House than all the statistics in the world. |
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If you are already familiar with the principles of Bayesian statistics, you will probably have no trouble understanding the derivation. |
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A small number of dedicated and repeated self-harmers have, in the past, sent the statistics through the roof. |
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Ross, in his book, explains the most common baseball statistics for evaluating batters. |
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So the people putting together the maps and the statistics deserve support, not blame or chastisement. |
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Descriptive statistics such as means, standard deviations, medians, percentages and frequencies were used to summarize the data. |
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Descriptive statistics, including means, medians, range, standard deviation, and frequencies, were used to enumerate the TAT process. |
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Summary descriptive statistics were computed by using proportions or medians and interquartile ranges. |
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Winners were selected on the basis of statistics provided by the Billboard Information Group. |
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The large number of statistics will, of course, be meat and drink to the Formula One fanboys at which this tome is mainly targeted. |
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In recent years, statistics suggest, hospital discharge rates have increased threefold and mortality has increased nearly 30 per cent. |
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Mind you that salt should be taken, as second-hand information and college statistics might not be enough. |
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The finance division can now obtain more accurate and frequent statistics, the company said. |
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Tilton is barnstorming the country, outlining his proposal in speeches, interviews and employee meetings, and touting some promising statistics. |
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Yes, and we'll carry on being in denial until you sort your statistics out, matey. |
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Based on previous years' statistics, the coming summer holiday season will see dozens more. |
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The statistics of most of the old-timers don't match up to what guys are doing today. |
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But what about the personal stories behind the statistics of Britain's most prolific mass murderer? |
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In order to massage the statistics the definition of extremist criminal offences was changed. |
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His statistics as a second banana indicate that he may regain the No.1 throne someday soon. |
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That's the kind of thing I love to dig into, a classic case of using statistics to bamboozle people. |
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The attorney general proclaimed the statistics to be the first true snapshot Territorians had ever had. |
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He touched the planet on the star map, and it listed statistics on the planet itself. |
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Last year's statistics reveal that 1183 foreign hunters bagged over 8900 animals in the province at a cost of over R44,5 million. |
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However, we would repeat our view that management accounting is more than just business statistics. |
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Economic statistics also show that the ban has not had the disastrous impact on pub sales feared by many scaremongers. |
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The statistics include registrations of various makes which compete with each other. |
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Female victims were in the majority, and statistics showed physical abuse accounted for about 80 per cent of all cases. |
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Compositional data were returned to a sample space suitable for conventional statistics through the use of additive log-ratio transformations. |
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More details about statistics, pharmacokinetics, drug assays, and blood sampling are given in the online supplement. |
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Much of what economists do is analyse the statistics of what has already taken place. |
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Some simple diagnostics are functions of the statistics of interest such as autocorrelations and moving averages. |
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The rate of hydrolysis depends not only on the tacticity of the polymer, but probably also on its configurational sequence statistics. |
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Accurate statistics are hard to come by, especially in a country where social taboos and threats keep many victims silent. |
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The statistics emerging from the present survey does suggest some attenuation in the level of public dissatisfaction with sentence severity. |
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Almost every assertion is backed by a sackful of evidence, statistics or relevant quotations. |
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Yet his basic understanding of the use of statistics was rudimentarily wrong and he was incorrect by several orders of magnitude. |
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Obviously some of these are arguable statistics, but they're none the less troubling. |
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Industry statistics indicate that entrepreneurs are higher risk-takers than the general population. |
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In addition, you may need probability theory and statistics, linear algebra, numerical methods and the like depending on the field you choose. |
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He reminds me a bit of a right-handed Ben Grieve, who posted similarly great statistics in the California League as a 20-year-old. |
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Instead, I was rewarded with insight on how to read and understand baseball statistics. |
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Throughout the show various statistics were flashed up on the screen which frankly seemed hard to believe. |
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Armchair analysts and cricket pundits are catching upon game statistics to reel off facts and figures in an instant. |
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Those sort of facts and statistics are true in so many instances of cancer now. |
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If you looked at the same statistics two years ago, the positions would have been reversed. |
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History will record only the bare statistics, but the figures are less revealing than the timing of their accumulation. |
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Gartner has retracted its most recent quarterly server numbers and published revised statistics. |
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Dr Anthony offered no statistics whatsoever to justify the government's determination to legalize certain abortions. |
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In these statistics I have counted each manuscript only once, even if it was returned to the author after review and was later resubmitted. |
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I haven't, for instance, recommended memorising great swathes of sporting statistics, or learning the eight times tables. |
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To measure this region, both the instrument resolution and photon statistics need to be improved. |
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While these statistics are for women resident in Waterford city and county, more births were actually registered in Waterford. |
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I don't analyse visitor statistics in detail, just a one line summary each day, so I've no way of telling who was the two-millionth visitor. |
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In 1993, according to Latvian government statistics, 53.5 percent of inhabitants were ethnic Latvians, while 33.5 percent were Russians. |
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Koehler has provided outstanding leadership in presenting graduate courses to students majoring and minoring in statistics. |
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If you are not able to disclose such statistics, can you give us the audience figures, year-on-year? |
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Those Victorians who rejoiced in statistics could relish the expansion of the system. |
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When academics try to allay public fears with statistics, we must always ask who funded that research. |
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The office for national statistics and the general register office supplied copies of death certificates. |
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Aitken's mathematical work was in statistics, numerical analysis, and algebra. |
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But the statistics alone, as horrifying as they are, hardly convey the trauma, pain and wretchedness of the victims. |
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The statistics reflect a continuing downward trend in overall crime rates during the past three years. |
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New legislation means vastly increased workloads in administration, much duplication of work and huge amounts of statistics. |
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With those statistics, it's only natural to wonder at what point Orpheus is no longer really Orpheus. |
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What I want to do first is get a handle on the statistics for all U.S. multinationals together, and those data are actually pretty clear. |
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They believed in the importance of information, statistics, and systematic record-keeping. |
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The statistics show the region has the second highest level of overall crime recorded by the police. |
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Mr Goss sees no danger and is eager to recite statistics that paint a bright picture of his operation's future. |
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Whereupon, the President launches into an answer, and the answer was a long recitation of statistics about the extent of discrimination. |
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But I don't know enough about the public health statistics to know whether this objection actually holds water. |
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He seems utterly absorbed with his personal statistics and appears not to care whether the Cubs win or lose. |
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From the other side, he doesn't have sparkling offensive statistics and his throws don't have great zip. |
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These publications discuss subjects including soil, agronomy, nutrition, plant protection, agricultural economics and statistics. |
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The statistics clearly show that both urban and agrestic rate of poverty has fallen significantly in the last decade. |
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It paints a picture of real disasters on a global scale, in a set order and with attendant statistics. |
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Of course, these are headline-level statistics, aggregating sectors and occupations. |
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It's beyond my ken, but for those in the know there's an accompanying set of statistics, ranging from water absorption rates to frost resistance. |
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Despite occasional warnings about a rising tide of juvenile crime, the statistics show a determined resistance to inflation. |
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Critics wonder how forensics experts without advanced degrees can design double-blind studies, or use statistics to calculate error rates. |
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The global warming debate still rages and scientists use statistics to prove their point in both the YES and the NO case. |
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It all goes to demonstrate the old adage that statistics can be used to prove anything, provided you jiggle them properly. |
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From the early days, through bodyline to today's record-breaking Australia team, it's much more than a simple book of statistics. |
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The government's statistics on the quantity of fish being exported should be considered gross underestimates. |
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But this is not a book of statistics, and it's not weighted down with moralizing and anger. |
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Life expectancy is a term used by actuaries, people who calculate statistics and probability for insurance use. |
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I can see this in terms of the weekly web server statistics that I monitor. |
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However, the evidence of a degree of institutional racism is in the statistics. |
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You must possess a wonderful memory, not only for statistics and the inside skinny, but also for anecdotes. |
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She is the sport's acknowledged New Zealand expert in terms of statistics, records and champions. |
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However, official statistics show that there are just 3107 locations that accept Visa cards in Bulgaria. |
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Going by statistics we see that he is among the Indian batsmen to score centuries in both the innings. |
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That may be appropriate, but using these qualitative data for quantitative statistics is fraught with difficulty. |
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Yet, even though official statistics reveal this abysmal state of affairs, what is the Government's response? |
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I'm sure they'd have fancy statistics saying that this added up to a quadrillion dollars in lost revenue. |
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Final data were abstracted directly from published articles or estimated from descriptive statistics presented in the articles. |
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But as the more perceptive economic commentators have noted, the rosy economic statistics and apparent buoyancy of the Australian economy rest on a house of cards. |
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She cited a series of statistics to dramatize the seriousness of the problem. |
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The government, which stopped publishing crime statistics years ago, insists that violence has abated. |
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So however detailed the statistics of the battlefield are, they cannot achieve the goal. |
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Moral questions of responsibility, however, cannot be adjudicated by statistics. |
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This is only made that much worse by the grim statistics we augmented on Friday. |
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A hard look at campus rape statistics, the collapse of The New Republic and the day John Lennon died. |
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If you're driving the ball poorly, you don't need statistics to know it. |
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The statistics paint a picture of munchers and snackers toiling over crumb-infested keyboards, surrounded by a sea of empty potato-chip bags and unfurled candy-bar wrappers. |
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They also have access to the statistics showing the exact time spent away from the phone, such as toilet breaks or getting drinking water from the water cooler. |
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Paul Krugman and others keep harping on the fact that the United States spends more on health care than other industrial countries, yet our longevity statistics are no better. |
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He holds an undergraduate degree in natural sciences and an MA in health statistics, but no PhD and no climatology credentials. |
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One spokesperson even worked late into the night to compile statistics related to Peace Corps safety. |
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So how much weight should judges give to public health statistics? |
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Yeah and verily, the computer virus econometrics gurus join a royal college of experts who live primarily to feed statistics and figures to the news media. |
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The rising statistics may correspond to the high number of unemployed Americans worrying about putting food on the table. |
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I wanted to get beyond the raw statistics, the charts and the predictions. |
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Of course, the statistics of that division are shocking, and of course the rich countries gang together in the G8 to make sure the division continues. |
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This includes removal of certain advertising components that may gather statistics, as well as detection of various keylogging and other spy utilities. |
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For example, both authors use a combination of rescreening data, laboratory statistics, report accuracy, and program performance to reassign workload. |
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Lambert makes some reasonable criticisms of the statistics which were alleged to show global cooling and recalculates the statistics concerned in a more orthodox way. |
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No story describing a problem or social phenomenon was complete without a few meaningless statistics passed off as hard fact or proof of some assertion. |
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These statistics are worrying, especially in a rural Scottish village. |
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In the wider scenario, a lot of the apparent financial imbalance in the statistics will be explained away by the inequity between men's and women's salaries. |
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There are two statistics or two comments I want to refer you to. |
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When I last had statistics, there were 3,600 lifers in our prisons. |
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The statistics are difficult to assess as allotting causes of various types of collapse to overwork is medically controversial and often socially embarrassing. |
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It is possible that when the fight statistics are scrutinised that Arias, the Brazilian heavyweight champion, will have a tally of punches landed in single figures. |
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Only cricket works itself into such a lather about statistics. |
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In this article, we define new population-specific parameters of population divergence and construct sample statistics that are estimators of these parameters. |
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I have always maintained that Mickey Mantle was a more devastating hitter right-handed than left-handed, but have never had the statistics to support my argument. |
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And they very much like lissome blonde lovelies with a winning smile and statistics that are undeniably vital so long as we aren't talking about her game. |
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The hospitality figures appear within statistics showing what it costs to run the two archbishoprics and other items, including travel and subsistence. |
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If you have a very localized cancer and you are using statistics that include many people with a more widespread cancer, then that data may not apply to you. |
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This more subtle observation cannot be appreciated without a minimal knowledge of introductory inferential statistics and the ability to do long division. |
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It is likely that we will hear more verbal assaults around both the accuracy of poverty statistics, and the legitimacy of those who produce such research. |
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A new offence will also be created of using children or innocent parties to hide or carry knives or guns, in an attempt to stem the rising violent crime statistics. |
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But in the course of her illness, she said, it was intensely tiresome when people assumed she was at death's door, in spite of statistics proving how good her chances were. |
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As we all know, fielding statistics are the question mark of sabermetrics. |
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The helpfulness of the Dutch points to one of the darkest statistics of the war. |
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To the speechwriters, he was the hobgoblin of editors, demanding we cram in more statistics, more attacks, more examples. |
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Buried inside the statistics was a comment from the boss of IATA, Giovanni Bisignani. |
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What is much more important than these numbers is an internal dynamic for which there are no statistics. |
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For passengers, beyond the statistics lies a puzzle that has persisted for years. |
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Putting aside all those who must have been dragged there because Orwell's novel was one of their English set texts, that's still an impressive set of statistics. |
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Crime figures, like any statistics, can be massaged to suit any occasion. |
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According to official statistics, there are about 24 pelagic vessels in Namibia, most of which have not been going to sea in the past three seasons following poor catches. |
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There was no position for him at the university at this time so he was not able to teach his specialist research topics, but rather he had to teach mechanics, and statistics. |
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With statistics like these, it is imperative that nurses educate their patients regarding cancer prevention, self-examination, early warning signs, and actions to take. |
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It was decided to include a Polish 'tick box' as Home Office statistics show they account for around 70 per cent of migrants from new EU member states in Eastern Europe. |
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As the sports staff soon found out, he was a bearcat on statistics. |
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It fills a void and feeds a hunger for something that is not shrouded in statistics, task forces, and synergistic partnerships. |
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While meteorology is a science complicated by chaotic weather patterns, statistics on the tumultuous developments illustrate a definite trend in the past decades. |
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New statistics reveal that although deaths from ecstasy quadrupled in England and Wales between 1998 and 2001, Scotland saw a sevenfold increase over the same period. |
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From any standard this level is said to be touching the poverty line, but statistics show that despite the government's claims poverty is on the rise. |
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It's like being ambushed by a rugby tragic who can recite meaningless statistics and All Blacks anecdotes with all the subtlety of a rolling maul. |
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It was a night ripe with superlatives and mind-boggling statistics. |
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A recent Amnesty survey presented even more shocking statistics. |
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The local authorities kept careful statistics of the treadwheels, which provided extensive information on human work, of a nature far more accurate than earlier studies. |
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Oscar forecasters like to trot out old statistics when deciding who will win which awards. |
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The eating disorder centre's statistics show that people who diet regularly are more likely to develop serious eating disorders, such as anorexia, bulimia, and bingeing. |
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A natural mathematician, he read psychology and mathematics at Aberdeen before undertaking postgraduate studies in mathematical statistics and biometry. |
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Staff should be hired, or associates developed, in population statistics, biostatistics and epidemiology, sequential statistics, as well as developmental statistics. |
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To say that statistics mitigate murder is obviously contemptible. |
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Well-captioned graphs, short sidebars with financial and market statistics, and fully explained photos make the editorial sections a pleasant read. |
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Behind these statistics are the stories of promising lives cut short and of the motherless children left behind. |
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There are no statistics on the number of unreported incidents of sexual harassment. |
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According to USDA economic statistics, over the next 20 years U.S. share of world GDP will shrink from 26 percent to 22 percent. |
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Until recently compilations of slave trade statistics have seemed to reduce one of the darkest episodes in world history into a set of abstract and bloodless figures. |
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The noi statistics on the campaign race pay gap compare all staffers of each race, and average out the salaries. |
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Unless stated otherwise, these figures come from research, not police statistics, as victims tend to under-report domestic violence to the police. |
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Okay, yes, they'll slant the statistics to suit their arguments, but in the main they are accountable for what they say and any massaging of data will be subtly done. |
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It is hard not to be moved when Americans talk about the anguish of losing their jobs, giving voice to the numbing statistics. |
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Church attendance continues on a long, slow, steady decline, according to Church of England statistics. |
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Any quick squiz at the statistics would more readily inspire one to drink a lot of gin and give housework up altogether. |
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Both these factors mean that official statistics relating to the Creative Industries should be treated with caution. |
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Germany's trade surplus was below expectations in February compared to the previous month, the country's statistics unit revealed. |
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As with crime statistics elsewhere, they are broadly divided into victim studies and police reports. |
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Climate statistics based on the counties of Northern Ireland vary slightly but are not significantly different. |
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And the third uses computers and statistics to profit from short-term mispricings in stocks. |
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The OECD is known as a statistical agency, as it publishes comparable statistics on a wide number of subjects. |
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The OECD publishes books, reports, statistics, working papers and reference materials. |
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Legal Aid and Defender said that other circuit courts in Michigan collect demographic statistics on prospective jurors on a voluntary basis. |
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Competitors at earlier Games born and living in Ireland are thus counted as British in Olympic statistics. |
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The most common of these descriptive statistics are the measures of central tendency. |
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The IOC does not keep statistics of medals won, but National Olympic Committees and the media record medal statistics as a measure of success. |
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Fred bowled me a googly when he asked me to explain those statistics in the meeting. |
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Australia's record between 1989 and 2005 had a significant impact on the statistics between the two sides. |
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However, membership statistics continued to surge with the party attaining 60,000 in England and Wales that April. |
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Organized cricket lends itself to statistics to a greater degree than many other sports. |
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Tighe was an agricultural theorist, and provided the younger man with a great deal of material on chemistry, biology and statistics. |
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According to all fitting criteria, it is a purely stochastic process obeying the Poisson statistics. |
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CoActivity Log Co Stores statistics about accomplished scanning tasks and latest database status in a user-friendly format. |
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The answer is 'yes', and the mathematics needed is the theory of probability and its applied cousin, statistics. |
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Over 100 new Math Apps to provide insight into concepts from math, statistics, physics, and finance. |
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The United Kingdom Statistics Authority is responsible for coordinating the release of census data by the devolved statistics authorities. |
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An ANTIQUITY paper used the methods of Bayesian statistics to combine radiocarbon and stratigraphic information into a single considered view. |
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As for statistics on coeliacs, around 1 in 100 people in the UK have the disease, but only an estimated 10 to 15 per cent have been diagnosed. |
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All this would be laughable if it weren't for the grim statistics. |
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But even more important than these jugglesome statistics is the aura and atmosphere of the city itself. |
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Each Wednesday, the captains of the five precincts and representatives from each subdepartment come together for a computer statistics meeting. |
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Key and quick statistics tables for Living Arrangements and Travel to Work Methods. |
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Survey data will be analyzed with descriptive statistics and qualitative data will be analyzed using a constant comparative analysis method. |
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Conception statistics include pregnancies that result in either one or more live births or stillbirths or a legal abortion. |
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This release will represent the start of the dissemination of detailed census statistics for small areas. |
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A value of examining this case is that the derivation requires the use of only elementary statistics and the quadratic formula. |
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The aim of characters measuring in this study is most uppermost selection of hybrid toward witness statistics for sensation and alkalinize earth. |
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Meanwhile, a policy wonk to his marrow, Angelides crammed his answers with statistics and pitched new proposals. |
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Myself and Cristiano Ronaldo make up two of the best wingers in the world and statistics show that. |
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Quick statistics for all geographies and population and household estimates for lower geographies. |
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But, unlike the Met Office, according to our number crunching statistics, we think weare in for acold winter with snow in December. |
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It is the global form of the wave function that is responsible for the existence of Fermi-Dirac or Bose-Einstein statistics. |
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Spectrum manufactures Wallboards and Software to display critical ACD statistics. |
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Internet usage statistics for 2007 also show Spanish as the third most commonly used language on the Internet, after English and Mandarin. |
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A dragon metaphor is used on occasion as an image on the screen during lecture to remind students of this rheme in statistics. |
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These statistics indicate the voters underreact to wins by low-ranked teams, and overreact to losses by top-ranked teams. |
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These statistics were simple columns of unadded figures, which took more than six months of all the time I could command to collate. |
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Using methods of literature material, video observation and mathematical statistics, this paper analyzed sanda players' leg-applied technology. |
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An encyclopedia article also often includes many maps and illustrations, as well as bibliography and statistics. |
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Readers should have background in statistical inference and some exposure to applied statistics and computation. |
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Before the overhaul, statistics released by the Government showed there were already understaffing issues at Holyhead. |
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The Home Office publishes quarterly statistics on applications to the Worker Registration Scheme. |
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The Northeast is one of the four regions defined by the United States Census Bureau for the collection and analysis of statistics. |
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Alongside official national statistics a number of respected private sector surveys are used to understand how the economy is performing. |
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According to the statistics released by Emirates Steel, consumption of rebar in the UAE in 2012 reached 160,000 metric tonnes per month. |
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Investigators gathered statistics and watched him playing cricket when he kept wicket and opened batting. |
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The overstayers come from 44 countries, according to statistics released by the Saudi National Committee for Hajj and Umrah. |
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S Recreational Vehicle Dealers Industry report, published annually, contains timely and accurate industry statistics, forecasts and demographics. |
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In countries where Gaels live, census records documenting population statistics have taken place. |
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In 2011, several law schools were sued for fraud and for misleading job placement statistics. |
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There were no further censuses but statistics were maintained by counting births, deaths and migration. |
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According to immigration statistics, the state is a leading recipient of migrants from around the globe. |
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Muslims numbered 243 in 2000 and 577 in 2010 according to the official statistics. |
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Many population studies acknowledge the inherent difficulties in producing reliable statistics, given the scarcity of hard data. |
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During the 1980s, health statistics, including life expectancy and causes of mortality, were gradually made available to the outside world. |
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This initiated the first records of vital statistics with filiations available in Europe. |
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Overall, the report is likely to provide clients with an optimum source of knowledge and statistics related to cosmeceuticals market worldwide. |
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Economists draw on the tools of calculus, linear algebra, statistics, game theory, and computer science. |
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Likewise, Perot continued to work on the miscellaneous goal of proving his own presidentialness via use of statistics and common sense. |
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The United Nations put the Panamanian civilian death toll at 500, while other sources had higher statistics. |
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They argue that a natural scientist repeatedly remeasures the same situation, justifying application of probabilities and statistics. |
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Astrostatistics is the application of statistics to astrophysics to the analysis of vast amount of observational astrophysical data. |
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Children were often underreported, especially female children, as shown by skewed population statistics throughout the Ming. |
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Choropleth maps use color hue and intensity to contrast differences between regions, such as demographic or economic statistics. |
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I am extremely sceptical of the unprovable statistics people come up with now. |
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Who criticizes the New England Journal of Medicine for its Latinate jargon, fancy statistics, and clinical exposition? |
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Their model takes us back towards counting numbers and statistics when I had hoped we had moved on from that. |
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In mathematics, calculus, statistics, logic, vectors, tensors and complex analysis, group theory and topology were developed by Westerners. |
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According to the Danish statistics institute, approximately five million people of Danish origin live in Denmark today. |
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The Greek government does not keep statistics on religious groups and censuses do not ask for religious affiliation. |
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This conclusion is based on the most recent Leading Indicators report published by the statistics agency. |
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The economic development of Kievan Rus may be translated into demographic statistics. |
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However, statistics of the Finnish population according to first language and citizenship are documented and available. |
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According to statistics, almost 41,000 children and young people under 16 years of age are living with HIV in Lesotho. |
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Since 1980 it has been illegal for the government to collect statistics on religious beliefs or practices. |
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This report presents statistics on licitly manufactured psychotropic substances and their consumption around the world. |
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And in Bell End at Rowley Regis, West Mids, sellers can expect to lose PS61,000, according to the study by statistics expert Dr Geoff Ellis. |
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According to the United Nations FAO statistics, the total number of commercial fishermen and fish farmers is estimated to be 38 million. |
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In geography, statistics and archaeology, a settlement, locality or populated place is a community in which people live. |
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There is some controversy regarding comparative crime statistics due to inconsistencies between different police forces recording methodologies. |
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It also appointed district auditors and supplied such statistics as might be required by parliament. |
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However, even with these new statistics brought to light no changes were made in regards to the allotted yearly catch of cod. |
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Larger animals are too scarce in the fossil record for good statistics, so paleontologists have analyzed microfossil extinctions. |
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The first two chapters could be used for a graduate or upper-level undergraduate course in statistics or biostatistics. |
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Through the Commission, Norway and Russia also exchange fishing quotas and catch statistics to ensure the TACs are not being violated. |
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Comprehensive data showing scandium worldwide production, consumption, trade statistics and prices are provided. |
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