Nonsense!! A NI number is issued at around the age of 16 and stays with you for. The previious post implies that a 70 year old with a A will get called up. Women are issued with a A and aren't subject to conscription, so again, nonsense.
The first 2 letters exist purely to allow repetitive use of the same 6 numbers, in the same way that car license numbers change prefix (ie KC52 LWD and KC57LWD, one use of 52LWD, 5 years apart.)
Conscription is purely age and fitness based.
Conscription in the UK?
The letters at the end refer to the days when NI was recorded on a card and sent in to the DHS, so they didn't get them all at once they divided them in to 4 periods through the year, with the letter corresponding to the period your employer sent your card in. They have no meaning now, if AB123456A is allocated AB123456B will never be issued, but they are kept so we all have the same format NI numbers. The information by the previous/2nd contributor is correct.
what does D mean on your national insurance code
The first two letters of a UK National Insurance (NI) number indicate the individual's birth country or region within the UK. The following numbers typically represent a person's date of birth and gender.
If you mean National Express, their number is 0871 781 8181.If you mean the national Traveline, which gives coach and bus times for all operators, that's 0871 200 2233.Both numbers are expensive to call.
Mean is the same as average. To get the mean of a set of numbers: First, you add up all the numbers. Second, you divide by the number of numbers in the set. Total of all the numbers/Number of numbers in the set
if you mean 003007 then it is National Casualty Insurance Company in Wisconsin
The mean of a number is the average of a group of numbers. To find the mean you must add up all of the numbers in a data set. Then you take that number and divide it by the number of numbers you have in the data set. This will give you the mean.
The mean of a number is the average of a group of numbers. To find the mean you must add up all of the numbers in a data set. Then you take that number and divide it by the number of numbers you have in the data set. This will give you the mean.
You can easily find the mean of a group of numbers by getting the average. You can do that by simply adding up all of the numbers and then dividing that number by the number of numbers that you have.
To find the mean, you add up all the numbers and divide that total by the number of numbers you have. With only one number, the mean will always be that number.
To find the mean, you add up all the numbers and divide that total by the number of numbers you have. With only one number, the mean will always be that number.
To get the range of a group of numbers you subtract the smaller number from the larger one The mean is the "average" for a group of numbers to get the mean you add all the numbers together. Then divide that number by the number in the group.
The last letter has to do with the order in which you may be drafted in the unlikely event of a war. A being the first B the second until D which is the last available draft.