

This is my last Icon Infographic as 5.0, any future new icons will not be made into the infographic. Please do not give me gold or silver, it would be a waste.
#White infographic icons free
Feel free to make another Unhelpful edition, and hope you can credit me To u/TheJadrimian, I am sorry, to me this is my biggest work, its everything to me, I went through a lot IRL, now I feel bad what I said to you. Sources from FandomWiki, semlar, last post comments from you guys Why am I doing this? For community benefits Using different background colors to categorize icons, most backgrounds are in greyscale, its most contrast to white and black icons. Icons are in order by alphabet or category, from common to rare.

#White infographic icons update
"What is this icon?" Infographic Update (2.0)Īims on Warframe newbie, veterans may learn one or two, hope you can share it with other players too.ĭesign Ratio 3:2 I was surprised I make this ratio unintentionally. (#s "Text"), which will appear as Spoiler: or


Obesity prevalence was higher in the highest income group than in the lowest income group among non-Hispanic Black men. Researchers observed this pattern among non-Hispanic White and Hispanic men. Among men, obesity prevalence was lower in the lowest and highest income groups compared with the middle-income group.No differences in obesity prevalence by education level were noted among non-Hispanic Asian women and men and Hispanic men. Although the difference was not statistically significant among non-Hispanic Black men, obesity prevalence increased with educational attainment. However, the differences were not all statistically significant. The same obesity and education pattern occurred among non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, and Hispanic women, and non-Hispanic White men.Overall, men and women with college degrees had lower obesity prevalence compared with those with less education.The association between obesity and income or educational level is complex and differs by sex and race/ethnicity. The obesity prevalence was 39.8% among adults aged 20 to 39 years, 44.3% among adults aged 40 to 59 years, and 41.5% among adults aged 60 and older.Non-Hispanic Black adults (49.9%) had the highest age-adjusted prevalence of obesity, followed by Hispanic adults (45.6%), non-Hispanic White adults (41.4%) and non-Hispanic Asian adults (16.1%).
