Searching for the word families in House of Representatives within the 1970s…
The word families
- appears in 2.5% of speeches
- appears 4801 times in 2666 speeches
- was spoken on 641 sitting days by 216 different people
- appears in speeches on 1305 different topics
Top speakers:
- WILSON, Ian (206 uses)
- PRESIDENT, The (203 uses)
- HAYDEN, Bill (180 uses)
- JOHNSON, Leslie (138 uses)
- WHITLAM, Gough (125 uses)
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Top days:
- 29 August 1979 (58 uses)
- 26 May 1976 (56 uses)
- 24 November 1971 (55 uses)
- 5 October 1971 (53 uses)
- 28 February 1978 (46 uses)
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Top topics:
- ADJOURNMENT (131 uses)
- QUESTION: GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S SPEECH (130 uses)
- APPROPRIATION BILL (No. 1) 1979-80: Second Reading (Budget Debate) (118 uses)
- GRIEVANCE DEBATE (72 uses)
- INCOME TAX ASSESSMENT AMENDMENT BILL (No. 2) 1976: Second Reading (52 uses)
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Associated words:
- income families (377 appearances)
- australian families (204 appearances)
- young families (115 appearances)
- many families (110 appearances)
- large families (104 appearances)
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Sample sentences:
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Families have to be helped by government provision of hospitals, of the services within the hospitals, and by the provision of schools, school equipment, school buildings and school teachers.
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It is on this basis that the Opposition is arguing that ‘the vast majority of taxpaying families’ would have been better off had the Government maintained the child rebates and indexed them in 1976 and 1977 in the same way that the other rebates were indexed.
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The second element recommended by the Ranger Inquiry was the development of specific arrangements to protect the natural and historic features of the Alligator Rivers environment, to protect the Aboriginal people who have lived there for centuries and to protect the mine workers and their families who will take up residence there.
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Job vacancies filled by migrant workers with little regard for vocational qualifications, language disabilities, housing and accommodation, welfare provisions and adequate eduational facilities for their families, is to create such additional problems as would far outweigh the temporary stopgap policy of manning the assembly lines and filling the less-popular and often lower income vacancies available.
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Like all honourable members, including those on the Government side, I know the plight of people in receipt of social services - the people on low incomes, people with families who.