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

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1 This trend has persisted in the 1980s ; by 1989 the mean age at marriage stood at 24.8 for women and 26.9 for men .
2 Even allowing for the investment risk of personal pensions , this amounted to a guaranteed gain for younger people and a fairly sound proposition for anyone aged up to about 40 for women and 45 for men .
3 Japan had the highest figures for longevity ( 82.5 years for women and 76.2 for men ) while the USA rated respectively 16th for women ( 78.6 ) and 23rd for men ( 71.6 ) .
4 Parfums Christian Dior , internationally renowned for its quality and vitality , now produces six fragrance lines for women and three for men , as well as a large variety of beauty care products and make-up .
5 Parfums Givenchy produces and distributes five fragrance lines for women and three for men throughout the world , as well as a children 's cologne .
6 What is generally of more interest is the probability , q 40 , of death between ages 40 and 41 for men in the 1946 birth cohort .
7 On a scale ranging from 0 ( least satisfied ) to 10 ( most satisfied ) , unemployed men 's average rating was 4–7 — compared with a rating of 7–4 for a group of employed men in Brighton , and 7–5 for men in general in a nationwide survey by the Social Science Research Council ( SSRC ) in the mid-1970s .
8 Figures cited included a fall in life expectancy , to 69 years for women and 63 for men in 1992 ; 3,500,000 abortions in state hospitals in 1991 ( compared with 2,500,000 live births ) ; 15 per cent of Russian territory was described as being in a situation of " ecological crisis " .
9 Life expectancy is falling ( the 1992 figure of 69 years for women and 63 for men compares with UK figures of 78.3 and 72.7 ) .
10 The employee 's problems arose because by section 82 the ages used for disentitlement were those at which the old age pension was payable — 60 for women and 65 for men .
11 There are no certainties in the field of demography , but on the assumption that present mortality rates at all ages will not worsen , we can be fairly certain about the absolute numbers of men and women over the present statutory retirement pension age ( 60 for women and 65 for men ) well into the twenty-first century — at least until the 2040s — because all of them are already born .
12 In more recent years , 60 years of age for women and 65 for men have tended to be the maximum ages at which permanent retirement from the labour force takes place , earnings from current employment cease , and statutory and , in some cases , occupational pensions are drawn .
13 Except where otherwise stated , the tables derived from the 1979 Survey include all those aged over the statutory retirement age at the time , 60 for women and 65 for men .
14 The elasticity of expected duration with respect to unemployment benefits is 0.18 for teenage men , around 0.14 for men aged 20–44 , 0.08 for men aged 45–54 and 0.06 for men over 55 ; ( vi ) the elasticity of hazard rate with respect to unemployment benefits is estimated to be -1.19 , which is nearly double that of NNS .
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