English to Urdu Dictionary cohort

cohort

دستہ
definition
noun
He replaced the existing praetorian guard with sixteen cohorts recruited from his German legions.
an ancient Roman military unit, comprising six centuries, equal to one tenth of a legion.
a cohort of civil servants patiently drafting legislation
a group of people banded together or treated as a group.
example
This 'cohort' had difficulty settling down in the more pacific atmosphere of the New Economic Policy.
a long-time 'cohort' of the band
Among the primary readjustment problems for this 'cohort' were the poor economic situation, the attitudes and gossip of locals, inefficiency, and the slow pace of life.
Sometimes linked with Mars, he was honoured by various senior officers, by soldiers of all the legions, and by the 'cohort' at the fort of Birdoswald.
In a 'cohort' of experienced Swiss general practitioners most were unable to interpret correctly numerical information on the diagnostic accuracy of a screening test
The top schools cater for a 'cohort' of students whose parents can afford to pay for grinds and revision courses.
A New Zealand survey was conducted by the ministry of Research Science and Technology to examine the experiences of a 'cohort' of graduates in the first five years after they graduated.
As a result, the Army will soon have a 'cohort' of company grade officers who are accustomed to operating independently, taking the initiative, and adapting to changes.
Having spent months recruiting, training, and developing a 'cohort' of staff, directors wonder what they might do to entice staff to return.
The only exception to this generalization comes from the Dublin 1899 'cohort' , where the percentage dropped to just slightly more than one-tenth of the membership.
Initially designed for cavalry, the fort was garrisoned by an infantry 'cohort' of 800 men in the C2.
This October its first undergraduate 'cohort' launches a new BA in geography & archaeology.
He's a 'cohort' of Ricci's and he worked in the Smart neighborhood.
The researchers studied the reported mortality rates and causes of death in a 'cohort' of women who used homeless shelters in Toronto.
the 1940–4 birth 'cohort' of women
Subjects responding may represent a 'cohort' of individuals who are more motivated and generally more compliant with therapy than nonresponders.
Deaths due to malignancy were mainly linked to smoking, previously shown as common in our 'cohort' .
For infant deaths and postneonatal deaths, deaths were attributed to the year of birth, and the 1981-1991 birth 'cohort' was analyzed.
The distribution of occupations among the first three generations is significant per 'cohort' and therefore not due to chance.
To begin, I will discuss two central notions - the issue of nationalism and the issue of women as a political 'cohort' - from a deconstructionist perspective.
In a 'cohort' of 220 patients recruited from general practice, a quarter died within three months.
Our program seeks to build a community of learners by bringing together each year's 'cohort' for a common course each semester.
A 'cohort' of more than 900 women who delivered by cesarean section at a large Vietnamese hospital was studied over a four-month period in 1997.
Five of the databases were established over 50 years ago, four being cancer registries and one a longitudinal birth 'cohort' .
Indeed, nine of the eleven shop assistants in the 1899 'cohort' were migrants into the city.
Laslett was part of a remarkable 'cohort' of undergraduate historians at St John's College, Cambridge in the late 1930s which included the likes of John Habbakuk and Edward Miller.
a 'cohort' of civil servants patiently drafting legislation
Flanagan was twenty-one years old when she joined the Central Branch of the league as part of the 1899 'cohort' .
However, even though the age 'cohort' is restricted for pension cases, and the men limited to Civil War veterans, the data may be wider and deeper than they first appear.
the 1940–44 birth 'cohort' of women
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