Definition of demographically in English:
demographically
adverb ˌdɛməˈɡrafɪkliˌdeməˈɡrafəklē
In a way that relates to the structure of populations.
the state is geographically and demographically diverse
Example sentencesExamples
- It all goes back to the late 1980s, when the last two years of high school were being transformed demographically.
- Data is weighted to demographically represent the North American population.
- In the demographically declining European nations, labor isn't increasing at all - in fact, often the labor force is getting smaller.
- She's a woman, after all, and romantic movies are demographically tailored to meet the cinematic needs of the fairer sex.
- What you're really describing is a Europe that is imploding demographically.
- We are indeed a young country demographically compared to Japan, Germany, Spain, Italy, Korea and many others.
- Purposeful sampling was used to identify demographically diverse groups of informants.
- Demographically speaking, the baby boom of 1946 to 1964 was an aberration.
- But if you are a fan of the Senator, you will find much of the rest of Indiana tilted demographically in her favor.
- Many policy implications arise from demographically induced economic changes.