Example sentences of "of the [num] census " in BNC.

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1 Second , there is the overlay on to this map of the 1981 Census ward boundaries and summation of pixels falling into each of the recognized land-cover types .
2 Using annual-change figures Champion ( 1983 , 1987 ) showed that the main decentralization process peaked in the early 1970s , and that by the time of the 1981 census the former pattern had to some extent reasserted itself .
3 The single most impressive finding of the 1981 Census in relation to population distribution was the massive decline in population sustained by Britain 's larger cities over the previous decade .
4 Many of those who stayed behind , especially the adherents of the Bogomil faith , accepted Islam , and their descendants form the nucleus of the Islamic community which embraced 37 per cent of the population of the republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina at the time of the 1981 census .
5 The childhood supplement does not provide detailed information about the economic or household characteristics of the 61445 children classified as unoccupied on the basis of information from a 10% sample of the 1981 census .
6 Studies of population and employment change in the 1970s , particularly those based on the results of the 1981 Census , are dominated by the urban-rural shift .
7 Figure 2.8 shows the numbers of men and women in Great Britain at the time of the 1981 Census who were employed in the various OPCS social classes or out of employment .
8 In addition use will be made of the 1981 Census Small Area Statistics and data from the National On-Line Manpower Information System to construct neighbourhood demographic and socio-economic variables to enable a richer analysis of the national surveys to be undertaken .
9 The time of year was chosen to be as close as possible to that of the 1979 census to ensure that seasonal mortality effects would not confound results .
10 Full details of the 1979 census have been published .
11 In 1926 38.3 per cent of the population were Ukrainian as against 37.9 at the time of the 1923 census .
12 In the area of closest scrutiny only 14 per cent of males ( 45/311 ) and 19 per cent of females ( 75/390 ) aged over ten at the time of the 1861 census were living in the same house as the one they had inhabited in 1851 ; but many of them had moved only a short distance .
13 Controversy over who was entitled to vote in the referendum had begun in July 1991 , when Morocco had appeared to have retracted its previous acceptance of the 1974 census as a basis [ see also p. 38410 ] .
14 A longitudinal study by John Fox and Peter Goldblatt of City University , London , showed that men unemployed at the time of the 1971 census were much more likely to have died over the subsequent four years .
15 However , Grundy ( 1986 ) , using data from the OPCS Longitudinal Study which is based on a 1 per cent sample of the 1971 Census linked to records from the 1981 Census , reports a similar pattern .
16 For some fifteen years now researchers wishing to have special tabulations compiled from the 1961 census of England and Wales have been refused due to ‘ technical difficulties ’ , and more recently it has been discovered that the machine-readable ten per cent sample of the 1971 census for Scotland is no longer accessible ( Marsh 1980 ; Schürer 1985 ) .
17 The present number of centenarians will not be known until the publication of the 1991 census .
18 The correlation between such unlikely indicators and target markets was not discovered by accident , and marketers who want to get the most out of the results of the 1991 census , which will shortly become available , should be thinking about how they will do it now .
19 Users of the 1991 census should nevertheless carefully consider whether crude population totals are the most suitable base for measuring penetration .
20 The availability of the 1991 census data on local populations by ethnic origin offers a timely opportunity for ethnicity — like occupational class — to be systematically recorded .
21 The National Health Service Management Executive is about to review the weighted capitation formula in the light of the 1991 census data .
22 The results of the 1991 census were expected in February-March 1992 .
23 The paper will discuss the potential of the 1991 Census for social research , the problems which must be acknowledged and how it may be used in conjunction with data from previous Censuses ; it will also describe the setting up of the service and the technical problems in managing such large datasets .
24 A copy of the 1991 Census datasets will be deposited at the ESRC Data Archive ( where it will join the data from previous Censuses ) when the data is complete and it appears that all corrections have been made .
25 By the time of the 1841 census the three sections of Fisher Row were inhabited by one large kin-group .
26 But then one often comes across other entries to amuse one on the way , such as the record of an enumerator 's problems in compiling part of the 1871 census for Sheffield shown in Table 2 .
27 Preliminary results of the 1988 census , released in March 1989 by the Planning Commission , revealed that the total population had risen to 23,174,336 , from 17,512,610 10 years earlier : an average growth rate of 2.8 per cent a year , compared with 3.2 per cent during the previous decade .
28 At the time of the 1901 census 71% of all people aged over 65 were aged between 65–74 .
29 This is amply confirmed by analysis of the 1911 census ( Matras 1965 ) , by the enquiries on contraception begun by Dr. E. Lewis-Faning in connection with the 1946 Family Census ( Lewis-Faning 1949 , Glass and Grebenik 1954 ) , and by all other surveys since , as well as by contemporary accounts ( Fryer 1965 ) .
30 Family limitation can first be inferred , primarily from the data of the 1911 census , among the families of professional men , particularly the clergy , doctors , and lawyers .
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