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Illustrated in the bar chart are the rates of first childbirth among women aged differently in

Australia in three separate years 1966, 1986 and 2006.

As can be inferred from the chart, while women at the age of 19- and 19-24 first
experiencing childbearing declined progressively, their 30s counterparts showed an upward
tendency. Meanwhile, a fluctuant progression was seen among the 25-30s and 40s. Another
key feature is that very few women aged 40+ gave birth for the first time.

At the outset of the survey, about 34% and 62% were the percentages of under-nineteen-
year-old and 19-24-year-old first-time-being mothers. These figures declined by more than
20% by 2006. Conversely, an upswing was recorded among the 30s, with relevant figures
tripling throughout the period examined.

Meanwhile, an oscillation was witnessed among women aged 25-30 who delivered their first
childbirth. In 1966, north of 35% of them became mothers for the first time. This figure rose
to exactly 50% in 1986 before decreasing to shy of 40%. Regarding the 40s, the rate of first
childbirth among them hovered around/ clustered between 4%.

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Given in the pie charts is the employment data recorded in two towns, lettered A and B,
according to three different professions/ lines of work in two years 1960 and 2010.

As can be inferred from the charts, while manufacturing workers in both towns increased in
numbers, the salespeople in two areas examined witnessed a downswing. Meanwhile, the
proportion of service workers recorded in each town was in reverse trends. Another key
feature is that manufacturing surpassed sales to become the most employing field in town A,
whereas sales remained dominant in town B.

C1: Body 1 - town A & Body 2 - town B


Regarding town A, the percentage of sales workers accounted for 41%, ranked first among
the three lines of work examined. This figure almost halved by 2010. Similarly, service
employment in this town also halved throughout the survey. Conversely, an upward
tendency was witnessed in the proportion of manufacturing laborers, with figures somewhat
doubled to 64% by the end.

Concerning town B, the townspeople who worked in sales constituted 72% in 1960. This
figure by 2010 declined by shy of 20%, although still claiming the first place in terms of
employment. A reverse upward tendency was seen among those working in services and
manufacturing, albeit to different extents. Specifically, the former increased by only 2%,
whereas the latter tripled during the survey.

Regarding sales, employment figures respective to two towns both declined by around 20%.
Conversely, a dramatic upward progression was recorded in the proportion of manufacturing
laborers in both towns, with town A almost doubling and town B precisely tripling. At the end
of the survey, while Manufacturing became the dominant field in town A, the field of sales in
town B remained the most significant employer.

Concerning the proportion of service workers in both towns, town A witnessed its service
employment numbers almost halving. An opposite trend was seen in the relevant figures in
town B, increasing by 2%.

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DỮ LIỆU THỜI GIAN TRONG TƯƠNG LAI & Mixed charts (dynamic)
1950 => 1990: QKĐ; 1950 => 2050: TLĐ, HTHT, HTĐ, Dự báo
+ TLĐ: S + will + Verb
+ HTHT/ HTĐ: S + has + V3/ S + Verb (s/es)
+ Dự báo: S + be + V3 (dự báo) + to Verb
*Dự báo: (is/ are) + predict, estimate, forecast, project, expect (ed) + to V
*Tuổi (25-37): the 25-37s, the 25-37-year-old population, 25-37 year-olds (noun)
those aged 25-37/ at the age of 25-37/ in the age group 25-37

Given in the line graph are the changes in the population of NZ, according to different age
brackets, within a timespan of 100 years, commencing from 1950 and predictions until
2050.

As can be inferred from the graph, while the 0-14s increase in their rate, a downward
progression is seen among the 25-37s. Meanwhile, the percentages of those aged 38-45
and 65+ witness a fluctuant trend. Another key feature is that those aged 65+ account for
the majority of the NZ population throughout the survey.

At the outset of the period, 0-14 year-olds constituted about 5% of the NZ population,
accounting for the least portion of the aggregate data. This figure is predicted to surge to
exactly 20% by 2050. Conversely, a downward trend is seen among the 25-37s, with figures
almost zeroing by the end of the survey.

Initially, those aged 65+ comprised north of 60%, predominant out of the age brackets
examined. This proportion peaked at 70% in 1990 before being projected to finish at about
55% by the end. Somewhat similar is the proportion of 38-45 year-olds, which at first rose to
shy of 50% during the 1950-1990 period. From then onwards, the figure is forecast to
decline to 40% and remain unchanged for the rest of the period.

before = prior to +V-ing = before + V-ing


bottom (v) xuống điểm thấp nhất cua nó
portion ≠ rate ≠ proportion
portion xuất hiện khi đối chiếu vs tổng

A portion

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