释义 |
Definition of natality in English: natalitynoun nəˈtalɪti mass nounThe ratio of the number of births to the size of the population; birth rate. 出生率 in spite of falling natality, the population as a whole went up 尽管出生率在下降,人口总数还是上升了。 Example sentencesExamples - Lower birth rate and greater parental attention to individual children helped advance the lower death rate - which in turn encouraged further reductions in natality.
- Following this approach, we can define four basic processes: natality, mortality, immigration, and emigration, each modeled by a separate model fragment.
- He notes that the Japanese government during the 1980s was using measures to encourage natality.
- There are also mounting indications that the skewed child male/female ratio is a consequence of increasing gender differences in natality, i.e. sex-selective abortion.
- The prospect of yet more exploitative taxes to support reproducer indulgence means that a questioning of the bio-political privileging of natality is long overdue.
OriginLate 19th century: from French natalité, from nat- 'born', from the verb nasci. Rhymesbanality, duality, fatality, finality, ideality, legality, locality, modality, morality, orality, reality, regality, rurality, tonality, totality, venality, vitality, vocality Definition of natality in US English: natalitynoun The ratio of the number of births to the size of the population; birth rate. 出生率 in spite of falling natality, the population as a whole went up 尽管出生率在下降,人口总数还是上升了。 Example sentencesExamples - Lower birth rate and greater parental attention to individual children helped advance the lower death rate - which in turn encouraged further reductions in natality.
- There are also mounting indications that the skewed child male/female ratio is a consequence of increasing gender differences in natality, i.e. sex-selective abortion.
- He notes that the Japanese government during the 1980s was using measures to encourage natality.
- The prospect of yet more exploitative taxes to support reproducer indulgence means that a questioning of the bio-political privileging of natality is long overdue.
- Following this approach, we can define four basic processes: natality, mortality, immigration, and emigration, each modeled by a separate model fragment.
OriginLate 19th century: from French natalité, from nat- ‘born’, from the verb nasci. |