there were 4,400 casualties in the war in Iraq, and about 200,000 returned home, so your ratio would be just about 50:1
number of deaths by total number of deaths in a population
The amount of Axis Soldiers Canadian Soldiers killed in World War 1 was far greater then the Canadian deaths. The difference ( or ratio) for Canadian Soldiers was 8 - 1. For every Canadian soldiers death there were 8 more Axis kills. The 8-1 difference was the highest in World War 1.
The ratio was 2.64 union soldiers for every confederate soldier. NEW RESPONDENT The most optimistic calculations give as an overall ratio between the two armies, in terms of men employed on the field of 1,50-1,75 Union soldiers for every Confederate.
3,672 kills--------1,432 deaths
The ratio of deaths to casualties was about 2:5. [Note: the above answer is for battle casualties only. The ratio was well over 1:10 when including non-battle casualties (accidents, disease, psychological illness, etc.)]
total number of deaths due to all causes in a year x 100total population
The number in the question is not a ratio it is simply a number. A ratio is a number compared to another number.
Birthrate is the number of live births per thousand of population per year, while death rate is the ratio of deaths to the population of a particular area or during a particular period of time, usually calculated as the number of deaths per one thousand people per year.
This can refer to many things. Your win-to-loss ratio; kills-to-deaths in a single game; etc... It depends on the context.
The ratio of a single number is the number itself.
A percent is a ratio of a number to 100.
12 is a single number. In so far as it can represent a ratio, it is a ratio of 12 to 1: a unit ratio.12 is a single number. In so far as it can represent a ratio, it is a ratio of 12 to 1: a unit ratio.12 is a single number. In so far as it can represent a ratio, it is a ratio of 12 to 1: a unit ratio.12 is a single number. In so far as it can represent a ratio, it is a ratio of 12 to 1: a unit ratio.