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Some questionnaires have groups of statements placed closely together but they are not always entered as one statement. This is mainly the case with questionnaires which begin with names and addreses. In most cases a carriage return is a strong indication to create a seperate statement (Example 8.i). Other times there is a carriage return between two statements but they are still entered as one statement usually because of a punctuation marker which links them together; for example, a semi-colon as shown in the examples below. (Example 8.i is an example of when statements pertaining to names and addresses are seperated and Example 8.ii is an example of when they are grouped togetherii).

Example 8.i Questionnaire: Teacher's Questionnaire 1959 (NSHD)

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Example 8.ii: Questionnaire Parental Questionnaire 1984 (NCDS)

Questionnaire layout:

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Archivist view (ncds_74_pq):

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