parities in English

noun
1
the state or condition of being equal, especially regarding status or pay.
parity of incomes between rural workers and those in industrial occupations
2
(of a number) the fact of being even or odd.
M is the lattice point if and only if x 1 and x 2 are of the same parity and so are y 1 and y 2.
3
the fact or condition of having borne children.
Other potential confounders examined included education, body mass index, age at menarche, hormone replacement therapy, parity , and use of multivitamins.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "parities" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "parities", or refer to the context using the word "parities" in the English Dictionary.

1. 5. Basic information on purchasing power parities (vote)

2. Basic information on purchasing power parities ***I (vote)

3. • Purchasing Power Parities and Real Expenditures:

4. Purchasing Power Parities and Real Expenditures.

5. Basic information on purchasing power parities ***I

6. P.E. 3.9: Price statistics, including purchasing power parities

7. Sources: UNODC ARQ (prices), World Bank (purchasing power parities)

8. National economic accounts > International comparisons Selected data tables Purchasing power parities Papers

9. [84] Another indicator of this could be the Power Purchasing Parities (PPP).

10. The data are at current prices based on purchasing power parities (PPP).

11. Granddams on both sides of Awestruck'S pedigree have had 10 and 12 parities

12. Starting from 2008 purchasing power parities are being produced in line with the new regulation.

13. The second approach uses purchasing power parities to reflect domestic prices on an internationally comparable basis

14. Therefore, the Cohesion Fund Regulation, too, gives to the Commission the statutory responsibility for calculating purchasing power parities.

15. Note: Aggregates are ECE secretariat calculations, using purchasing power parities (PPPs) obtained from the 1996 European Comparison Programme.

16. Endorsed the use of each country’s published national accounts data in the compilation of purchasing power parities (PPPs);

17. In 2011, new purchasing power parities (or PPPs, which essentially estimate how much $1 dollar buys in different countries) had been computed, and the data became available in 2014.

18. In 2005, when the previous round of purchasing power parities was estimated, the method used was to take the national poverty lines of the 15 poorest countries, compute their average, and treat that as the global line.