sekene

listen to the pronunciation of sekene
Türkçe - İngilizce
population
The people living in a single place

The population of some smalltowns is numbered in under four digits.

A group of units (persons, objects, or other items) enumerated in a census or from which a sample is drawn

...it is possible it might stand second to the Scandinavian countries if a fair sample of their population were obtained. Francis Galton et al. (1883). Final Report of the Anthropometric Committee, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, .

{n} the number of inhabitants
The entire set of persons that have at least one common characteristic of interest to the researcher The sample is selected from the population
The group with a particular set of characteristics to which researchers attempt to generalize their findings from a smaller sample These are the objects of generalizations for inferential statistics
The number of people who live in a place The population of China is over two billion
a count of the number of residents within a political or geographical boundary such as a town, a nation or the world
the act of populating (causing to live in a place); "he deplored the population of colonies with convicted criminals" (statistics) the entire aggregation of items from which samples can be drawn; "it is an estimate of the mean of the population" a group of organisms of the same species populating a given area; "they hired hunters to keep down the deer population" the people who inhabit a territory or state; "the population seemed to be well fed and clothed" the number of inhabitants (either the total number or the number of a particular race or class) in a given place (country or city etc
the act of populating (causing to live in a place); "he deplored the population of colonies with convicted criminals"
An aggregation or group of individuals defined by a set of common characteristics
a group of individuals of the same species living in the same area at the same time and sharing a common gene pool; a group of potentially interbreeding organisms in a geographic area
the people living within a political or geographical boundary
Biologically, a population is a group of organisms of one species occupying a defined area and usually isolated geographically or otherwise to some degree from other similar groups
A group of individuals of one species, which live in a particular area and are much more likely to breed with one another than with individuals from another such group
A group of organisms of the same species inhabiting a particular geographical area at a particular time Population
The set of individuals or objects having some common observable characteristics
The whole number of people, or inhabitants, in a country, or portion of a country; as, a population of ten millions
The entirety of subjects ie it is any entire collection (eg of people or things) from which we might collect data and that we wish to describe or draw conclusions about
Figures are estimates from the Bureau of the Census based on statistics from population censuses, vital statistics registration systems, or sample surveys pertaining to the recent past, and on assumptions about future trends Starting with the 1993 Factbook demographic estimates for some countries (mostly African) have taken into account the effects of the growing incidence of AIDS infections; in 1993 these countries were Burkina, Burundi, Central African Republic, Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Thailand, and Brazil Total fertility rate: The average number of children that would be born per woman if all women lived to the end of their childbearing years and bore children according to a given fertility rate at each age
sekene