Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term
males account for
I am not sure whether the males are the victims or the perpetrators of 80% of the crimes.
Thank you for your help!
4 +3 | victims | Yvonne Gallagher |
4 +1 | ambiguous | airmailrpl |
4 | Murders | Phoenix III |
Non-PRO (1): Edith Kelly
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Responses
victims
http://www.who.int/publications/10-year-review/ncd-other-dim...
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Note added at 7 mins (2017-08-21 14:17:19 GMT)
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yes, it is ambiguous and it's possible that the percentage of perpetrators is similarly male but in the graphic it's clearly talking about victims
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Note added at 12 mins (2017-08-21 14:21:44 GMT)
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Well, if you can do it easily, yes. But the graphic does spell out that the figure relates to deaths, i.e victims so I think it's safe to go with that.
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Note added at 4 days (2017-08-26 09:13:32 GMT) Post-grading
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Glad to have helped
Thank you! |
Do you think I'd better leave it vague? |
OK! Many thanks :) |
ambiguous
Thank you! |
neutral |
Phoenix III
: It is not ambiguous because by definition it refers to crime victims.
32 mins
|
there is NO mention of the word victim in the source text
|
|
neutral |
Edith Kelly
: with Phoenix
2 hrs
|
see above
|
|
agree |
Armorel Young
: Absolutely - it's ambiguous and on the face of it could easily apply to perpetrators (if you replaced "homicides" with "thefts", for example, wouldn't you be talking about perpetrators?)
16 hrs
|
thank you
|
|
agree |
Daryo
: just on its own, it couldn't be more ambiguous // obviously, as with any other text, the more context you have available, the less ambiguities subsist.
19 hrs
|
thank you
|
|
disagree |
Yvonne Gallagher
: it's not ambiguous when you actually look at the graphic
19 hrs
|
there is no graphic supplied by the asker
|
Murders
Thank you! |
neutral |
Edith Kelly
: that's not an anwer to the question
1 hr
|
disagree |
Daryo
: that wasn't the question
19 hrs
|
agree |
acetran
16 days
|
Gracias!
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