Generation - translation to spanish
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Generation - translation to spanish

ALL OF THE PEOPLE BORN AND LIVING AT ABOUT THE SAME TIME, REGARDED COLLECTIVELY
Twice-removed; Thrice-removed; List of generations; List of Generations; Length Of Generation; Generational cohort; Generational cohorts; List of generations, 1900-present; List of cultural generations, 1900 to present; Length of Generation; Cultural Generation; Familial generation; Human generation; List of named generations; Generationology
  • ''Geração à Rasca'' demonstration in Lisbon, 2011
  • Four generations of one family: a baby boy, his mother, his maternal grandmother, and his maternal great-grandmother. (2008)
  • Armenian]] family—a child with her mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and great-great-grandmother. (photograph dated from book published in 1901)
  • Eastern Orthodox priest family]] from [[Jerusalem]], circa 1893

generation         
generación
Generation         
Generación
lost generation         
  • pages=713–714}}</ref>
  • Image taken from a magazine cover (published 1924) of a couple dressed in fashionable clothing of the period.
  • French [[poilu]]s on a battlefield during the First World War
  • Jack]] in 1924. Stein is credited with bringing the term "Lost Generation" into use.
  • left
  • Vitagraph]] film, 1912)
  • Class photo taken at a school in Sweden (1900)
  • Family in [[Queensland]] pictured at home (circa 1900)
  • Children playing with toys (c.1890s)
  • [[Typewriter]]s entered common use as a writing tool for the Lost Generation
  • A young woman burning a cable for scrap at a shipbuilding yard in [[Glasgow]] during World War I.
GENERATION THAT CAME OF AGE DURING WORLD WAR I, HAVING BIRTH DATES APPROXIMATELY FROM 1883 TO 1900
Lost generation; The lost generation; Generation of 1914; Lost Generation (China)
Generación perdida ( generación que perdió el camino, generación sin metas)

Definition

programar
Sinónimos
verbo
proyectar: proyectar, disponer

Wikipedia

Generation

A generation refers to all of the people born and living at about the same time, regarded collectively. It can also be described as, "the average period, generally considered to be about 20–⁠30 years, during which children are born and grow up, become adults, and begin to have children." In kinship terminology, it is a structural term designating the parent-child relationship. It is known as biogenesis, reproduction, or procreation in the biological sciences.

Generation is also often used synonymously with birth/age cohort in demographics, marketing, and social science; under this formulation it means "people within a delineated population who experience the same significant events within a given period of time." Generations in this sense of birth cohort, also known as "social generations", are widely used in popular culture, and have been the basis for sociological analysis. Serious analysis of generations began in the nineteenth century, emerging from an increasing awareness of the possibility of permanent social change and the idea of youthful rebellion against the established social order. Some analysts believe that a generation is one of the fundamental social categories in a society, while others view its importance as being overshadowed by other factors including class, gender, race, and education, among others.

Examples of use of Generation
1. It suggests a tradition passed down from generation to generation.
2. First came Generation X, then Generation Y, and now?
3. The Korean ancestors worshiped the mountain generation to generation.
4. Bush, "you‘re seeing him with his generation, the older generation.
5. "The Stonewall Generation is an activist generation," said Amber Hollibaugh.