The relative proportion of older Japanese (age 65 and over) has increased over the last twenty years due to factors like low birth rates and longer life expectancy. This shift has implications for Japan's economy, social systems, and healthcare services as the population ages. The Japanese government has been implementing policies to address these demographic changes, such as increasing the retirement age and promoting active aging programs.
A person who is twenty years old is called a "young adult" or a "young person."
On dit 'Elle a vingt-sept ans' en français.
You would say "Ek is vyf-en-twintig jaar oud" in Afrikaans.
To say "how old you are" in Welsh, you would say "Sut hen wyt ti?"
To write age in French, you would use the word "âge" followed by the number. For example, "J'ai vingt ans" means "I am twenty years old."
A proportion is simply a statement that two ratios are equal. It can be written in two ways: as two equal fractions a/b = c/d; or using a colon, a:b = c:d. The following proportion is read as "twenty is to twenty-five as four is to five."
It is 'ni juu yon' in Japanese.
soviet
ni ju go
ni juu yon
The proportion absent is 14/22 = 7/11
Nijuu. Ne (sounds like knee) - Ju (as in juice)
I belive it was the Twenty-One Demands
it was Nixon
ni jyu go or 二十五
ffvtrggbv
"juu ni" is a Japanese word and in English it means "twelve"