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Multilingual Demographic Dictionary, second unified edition, English volume

Difference between revisions of "Talk:11"

Multilingual Demographic Dictionary, second unified edition, English vol.
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(113: vertically extended family, horizontally extended family and stem family)
(traditional families etc. Restfamilie)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
* {{translated German term|11|113|113-10|GermanNewTextTerm=Stammfamilie}}
 
* {{translated German term|11|113|113-10|GermanNewTextTerm=Stammfamilie}}
 
:The {{NewTextTerm|vertically extended family|8|113}} consists of three or more generations living in the same household or very close to each other. The {{NewTextTerm|horizontally extended family|9|113}} involves siblings with their spouses and their children living together. The vertically extended family can generate special types such as the {{NewTextTerm|stem family|10|113}} in which only the heir and his family may continue to reside with their parents. ''(to be revised)''--[[User:Nicolas Brouard|Nicolas Brouard]] 19:19, 7 August 2012 (CEST)
 
:The {{NewTextTerm|vertically extended family|8|113}} consists of three or more generations living in the same household or very close to each other. The {{NewTextTerm|horizontally extended family|9|113}} involves siblings with their spouses and their children living together. The vertically extended family can generate special types such as the {{NewTextTerm|stem family|10|113}} in which only the heir and his family may continue to reside with their parents. ''(to be revised)''--[[User:Nicolas Brouard|Nicolas Brouard]] 19:19, 7 August 2012 (CEST)
* {{missing German term|11|115|115-3|GermanNewTextTerm=Vollständige Familie}}
+
* {{translated German term|11|115|115-3|GermanNewTextTerm=Vollständige Familie}}
  
* {{missing German term|11|115|115-4|GermanNewTextTerm=Unvollständige Familie}}
+
* {{translated German term|11|115|115-4|GermanNewTextTerm=Unvollständige Familie}}
  
* {{missing German term|11|115|115-5|GermanNewTextTerm=Restfamilie}}
+
* {{translated German term|11|115|115-5|GermanNewTextTerm=Restfamilie}}
 +
 
 +
* {{translated German term|11|115|115-6|GermanNewTextTerm=Familienhaushalt}}
 +
: Married couples living with their children are called {{NewTextTerm|traditional families|3|115}}.  A {{NewTextTerm|broken family|4|115}} is one in which one of the parents has been lost by death, divorce or desertion.}} Families where one parent, separated or widowed, lives with her children may be also be named {{NewTextTerm|single parent families|4|115}}. Married couples, widowed or separated people who, at the time of the declaration, have no more children living in the household, may have special name, like in Germany, {{NewTextTerm|residual family (“Restfamilie”)|5|115}}. When these types of families are living within a household, they are called {{NewTextTerm|family household|6|115}}.
 +
{{Note|1| In the United States of America, a {{NoteTerm|sub-family}} is a married couple with or without children, or a parent with one or more never-married children, under 18 years of age, living as members of a household and related to but not including the head of the household and his wife. In Great Britain, the {{NoteTerm|primary family unit}} consists of parents and their children, the parents' sibs and ancestors.}}.''To be revised'', particularly for Restfamilie --[[User:Nicolas Brouard|Nicolas Brouard]] 11:07, 10 August 2012 (CEST)
  
* {{missing German term|11|115|115-6|GermanNewTextTerm=Familienhaushalt}}
 
  
 
* {{missing German term|11|116|116-6|GermanNewTextTerm=junge Generation}}
 
* {{missing German term|11|116|116-6|GermanNewTextTerm=junge Generation}}

Revision as of 11:07, 10 August 2012




A new sentence has been added, by Louis Henry, in comparison to the French first edition:
Un ménage complexe peut être décomposé en noyaux6, noyau principal 7, noyaux secondaires 8, ou en familles (112-1); la famille principale 9 est celle du chef de ménage; les autres sont appelées familles secondaires 10. On appelle dimension du ménage 11, ou taille du ménage11, le nombre de personnes composant le ménage.
Familiy (de)(re)composition is a matter which changed and is still changing. We even do not use the famille principale and famille secondaire expressions anymore in French. Thus, if the terminology is meaningful in other languages, it might be translated into English while referring to the French terminology. If you think that it had no reason to be translated to English in 1982, please change the wiki {{missing French term...}} above into {{untranslatable French term...}}. And justify shortly you decision, add your time-stamped signature by adding --~~~~ and go to the next missing term.--Nicolas Brouard 10:47, 20 April 2012 (CEST)
  • The Trilingual Demographic Dictionary Arabic-English-French of 1988 uses secondary family*. --Nicolas Brouard 19:17, 11 June 2012 (CEST)
The primary family 9★ is that of the household head when it is defined, the others are called secondary families 10★.
The vertically extended family 8★ consists of three or more generations living in the same household or very close to each other. The horizontally extended family 9★ involves siblings with their spouses and their children living together. The vertically extended family can generate special types such as the stem family 10★ in which only the heir and his family may continue to reside with their parents. (to be revised)--Nicolas Brouard 19:19, 7 August 2012 (CEST)
Married couples living with their children are called traditional families 3★. A broken family 4★ is one in which one of the parents has been lost by death, divorce or desertion.}} Families where one parent, separated or widowed, lives with her children may be also be named single parent families 4★. Married couples, widowed or separated people who, at the time of the declaration, have no more children living in the household, may have special name, like in Germany, residual family (“Restfamilie”) 5★. When these types of families are living within a household, they are called family household 6★.
  • 1. In the United States of America, a sub-family is a married couple with or without children, or a parent with one or more never-married children, under 18 years of age, living as members of a household and related to but not including the head of the household and his wife. In Great Britain, the primary family unit consists of parents and their children, the parents' sibs and ancestors..To be revised, particularly for Restfamilie --Nicolas Brouard 11:07, 10 August 2012 (CEST)