AGE COHORT collocation | meaning and examples of use (original) (raw)
collocation in English
meanings of age and cohort
age
noun
uk
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/eɪdʒ/us
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/eɪdʒ/
the period of time someone has been alive or something ...
cohort
uk
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/ˈkəʊ.hɔːt/us
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/ˈkoʊ.hɔːrt/
social science specialized
a group of people who share a characteristic, ...
Examples of age cohort
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
The age _cohort_-wise regressions offer some further interesting insights.
However, prevalence in the older age cohorts showed some marked changes rising to well above 20% in age cohort 3 in 1994 and age cohort 2 in 1996.
In spite of this, 68 % of the persons in the oldest age cohort responded.
If a population grows in size, the proportions of individuals in each age cohort change.
The intervention involves all children of an age cohort in middle schools.
Results presented here concern the first wave of interviews conducted for each age cohort.
The model attaches resource utilization and costs to an age cohort in a given year.
This is due to the fact that there are more women than men in the oldest age cohort.
We estimated the average annual number of reported cases per number of susceptibles for each age cohort.
The water scarcity variable was found to be positive and significant only for the middle age cohort.
Persons enter the model at the start of the year into the first age cohort (at 15 years of age).
It would be tempting to interpret the age cohort effects as developmental differences, but they are not.
We observe that in the heart of the great metropolis, linguistic changes advance steadily from one female age cohort to another.
Given survival probabilities by age, the total number of individuals in each age cohort is computed at each point in time.
This reveals age as a key determinant of when and how staff left, and whether any members of their age cohort were recruited.
From the database of reported measles cases we extracted the number of cases per age cohort per year from 1988 until 2000.
What we are faced with in age cohort and word initial cohort, however, is notfigurativeextensions of an earlier meaning, but something much more drastic.
Nevertheless, relative to the size of their age cohort in the organisation, they were by far the most likely to leave.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.