Example sentences of "[num] for man [conj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Estimated five yearly inceptions were 26/1000 for men and 18/1000 for women .
2 This gives five year detection rates of at least 26/1000 for men and 18/1000 for women in the age group 20–39 , so high arterial pressure in young adults is much commoner than has generally been supposed .
3 The median age of responders was 22 and the maximum age was 67 for men and 56 for women ( fig 1 ) .
4 Stewart Ritchie , of Scottish Equitable , suggests there is a grey area , of 40 to 45 for men and 35 to 40 for women , within which it is probably not worth making a change whether you are currently in or out .
5 The memorandum ( endorsed by the National Joint Advisory Council representing the British Employers ' Confederation , the TUC , and the nationalized industries ) identified as the essential problem the provision of a place in society for the ever-growing proportion of elderly persons and suggested that : ‘ Age sixty-five for men and sixty for women ought no longer to be regarded as ‘ normal retiring age ’ ' .
6 The previous age limits had stood at 35 for men and 30 for women .
7 Symptom scores were normally distributed for both sexes around a mean of 2.20 for men and 2.39 for women .
8 Moreover , so successful were the numerous methods for delaying marriage ( the mean age of which , by the early twentieth century was higher than at any other time in British history , 27 for men and 25 for women ) , that for the typical Edwardian the gap between leaving school and the full independence of marriage was twice as long as it is today .
9 An astonishing double of Lech Walesa , the Yugoslav spoke briefly about his Dictionary of the Khazars , which was in two editions , one for men and one for women .
10 It was built with two wings , one for men and one for women , separated by a chapel .
11 John Housden , of Hill Samuel , and Lesley Dunbar , of Life Association of Scotland , both cite 40 for men and 35 for women as the pivotal ages under the new rebate .
12 During the 1950s and early 1960s , retirement at the statutory pensionable age of 60 for men and 65 for women became widely established across occupations and social classes , although least at the highest status-levels .
13 If you are over pension age ( 65 for men and 60 for women ) you do not need to pay national insurance contributions .
14 A deduction is usually made from the pension with effect from age 65 for men and age 60 for women on account of National Insurance pensions .
15 The eligibility age for state pensions would be raised over the next decade from 60 to 65 for men and from 55 to 60 for women .
16 The reforms entailed an increase in employees ' contributions from 3 to 11 per cent of gross wage ; the raising of the pensionable age from 63 to 65 for men and from 58 to 60 for women ; the abolition of special allowances for particular categories of employees ; and the merger of pension funds .
17 At present these are 65 for men and 60 for women .
18 Precise average figures are rather meaningless , for the range might be wide , but it is useful to think in terms of an average age at marriage of twenty-seven to twenty-nine for men and of about twenty-six for women ; the nobility and gentry usually married a little earlier .
19 Today it has risen by more than twenty years , to 72 for men and 77 for women , and it is still rising .
20 It thus recommended that the age should ultimately be raised to 68 for men and 63 for women .
21 Since around 1960 incidence rates nearly doubled in men and tripled in women , and most recent data ( 1983–7 ) give incidence rates of 0.38/100000 for men and 0.74/100000 for women ( world standardised ) .
  Next page