per capita / pər ˈkæp ɪ tə /

人均人均水平按人头计算人均收入

per capita 的定义

  1. by or for each individual person: income per capita.
  2. Law. noting or pertaining to a method of dividing an estate by which all those equally related to the decedent take equal shares individually without regard to the number of lines of descent.Compare per stirpes.

per capita 近义词

n. 名词 noun

per person

per capita 的近义词 3

更多per capita例句

  1. The per capita income in Mississippi, for example, was $216 in 1940, compared with $676 in Michigan.
  2. Marshall Burke projects that over the next 80 years, per capita GDP in the United States will drop by 36% compared to what it would be in a nonwarming world, even as per capita GDP in Russia will quadruple.
  3. At the heart of that is a demand that the state resets its contract with Chileans to focus not just on creating wealth — Chile has the highest per capita income in South America — but making sure it is distributed more equally.
  4. There’s no connection between the divorce rate in Maine and per capita consumption of margarine, for example, even if those track with one another over time.
  5. More than 26,000 people had died, about 10,000 of them in New York City, where the per capita death rate had surpassed Italy’s.
  6. Added to drinking water at concentrations of around one part per million, fluoride ions stick to dental plaque.
  7. During an emergency that ratio could be allowed to drop to 8.5 people per orbit.
  8. Well over a thousand holes in, I average less than four strokes per hole.
  9. At least one child in CAR has been killed or gravely injured per day, and 10,000 have been recruited into militant groups.
  10. Bitcoin began 2013 with a roaring price of $770 per unit, and businesses right and left were converting to the ethereal product.
  11. I doubt that thirty persons per day are carried into or brought out of it by all public conveyances whatever.
  12. The Act permits member banks to accept an amount of bills not exceeding 50 per cent.
  13. At this period it brought enormous prices, the finest selling at from fifteen to eighteen shillings per pound.
  14. In 1205 wheat was worth 12 pence per bushel, which was cheap, as there had been some years of famine previous thereto.
  15. We did not talk much about the past at dinner, except—ah me, how bitterly we regretted our 10 per cent.