The Demopædia Encyclopedia on Population is under heavy modernization and maintenance. Outputs could look bizarre, sorry for the temporary inconvenience

Difference between revisions of "Infirm"

From Demopædia
Jump to: navigation, search
(Eugen Grebenik et al., first edition 1958)
m (35 no 36 bug in the program)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
<!--'''infirm'''-->
 
<!--'''infirm'''-->
{{TextTerms|S=360|P=36|Ed=I|CompleteIndexTerm=(INFIRM)| content=
+
{{TextTerms|S=360|P=35|Ed=I|CompleteIndexTerm=(INFIRM)| content=
 
{{NewLineT|S=360|N=1}} {{
 
{{NewLineT|S=360|N=1}} {{
 
TofT|Lang=en|Ed=I|N=1|Color=yes|Te=infirm}}{{
 
TofT|Lang=en|Ed=I|N=1|Color=yes|Te=infirm}}{{
Line 82: Line 82:
 
[[Category:Term of the first edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]
 
[[Category:Term of the first edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]
 
[[Category:Distribution and classification of the population]]
 
[[Category:Distribution and classification of the population]]
[[Category:36]]
+
[[Category:35]]
 
</noinclude>
 
</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 10:32, 11 February 2010

Infirm  (INFIRM)


The infirm1 or handicapped1 are often separately shown in censuses. They are classified according to the nature of their infirmity2. Physical infirmities3 such as blindness, or deaf-mutism are generally distinguished from mental infirmities4, such as idiocy or dementia.
More...