noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
survey/census data (= produced in a survey or census )
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Survey data show that people’s participation in sports rises with their level of income.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
national
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A national census has been taken every decade since 1801, except for the year 1941 when Britain was at war.
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The last national census which took place in 1981 provides information about the occupation of those residing in each locality.
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However, the national census will go ahead on April 29.
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These days much is known about the socio-economic composition of the population thanks largely to the national census .
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Britain submits to a national census .
official
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Lots of them-29m by the low-ball official census , with 1.2m more coming in each year.
■ NOUN
data
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The Department of Health has signalled its intention to review the formula in the light of 1991 census data , again using small area analysis.
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Apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives and state legislatures is based on census data .
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Since then the assumptions underpinning, and the meanings attributed to, census data have changed a good deal.
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I have reviewed census data and hundreds of reports and studies by economists and planners.
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More people bring more power, which is why Republicans are salivating over the 2000 census data .
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BFor businesses struggling to get some attention, the census data will help.
figures
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Therefore it is in the states' interest to inflate census figures .
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We know enough by now to treat the census figures with the skepticism and the indignation they deserve.
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Later census figures were published as they became available.
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More than 97 percent of all San Francisco households have telephones, according to 1990 census figures .
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This has obvious implications for services at a local level and provision needs to be related to regional trends and census figures .
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Final census figures for 1991, published yesterday, showed 49,890,273 people in the two countries.
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Using the 1734 census figures , this gives an average density of about 64-65 persons per square kilometre for the Piedmontese territories.
tract
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The variations in prosperity in the North Side become more acute when observed on the smaller scale of the census tract .
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Its neighbouring census tract to the north exhibited diametrically opposite trends, suggesting that whilst one area improved another declined.
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When census tracts are scrutinised in this neighbourhood a sharp division in experience becomes apparent.
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When the data for census tracts are observed a marked discrepancy can be seen within East Allegheny.
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There is less monitoring of such programmes at the micro-scale, that of the neighbourhood or census tract .
■ VERB
accord
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More than 97 percent of all San Francisco households have telephones, according to 1990 census figures.
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In 1994, according to our census , they made up 15 percent of the bee population.
based
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I mean the dollars that flow into our communities based on the census , that kind of thing.
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Apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives and state legislatures is based on census data.
conduct
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Read in studio Conservationists are about to conduct a census of one of our rarest mammals - the dormouse.
take
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Some of us may have taken part in an academic survey; most of us will have taken part in the census .
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Los Angeles took the census as its theme for its float in the Rose Bowl Parade.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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When was the first U.S. census taken?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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Apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives and state legislatures is based on census data.
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For married women under 60 there was a five-fold increase from 12 percent in 1931 to 57 percent at the 1981 census .
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Full details of the 1979 census have been published.
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The government removed this question from its survey in the 1940 census .
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The total census of the towns comes to just under 300,000 people of whom some 60,000 were capable of bearing arms.
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Therefore it is in the states' interest to inflate census figures.
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You see, no real work can begin until a proper census is taken.