estimating 的 3 个定义
es·ti·mat·ed, es·ti·mat·ing.
- to form an approximate judgment or opinion regarding the worth, amount, size, weight, etc., of; calculate approximately: to estimate the cost of a college education.
- to form an opinion of; judge.
es·ti·mat·ed, es·ti·mat·ing.
- to make an estimate.
- an approximate judgment or calculation, as of the value, amount, time, size, or weight of something.
- a judgment or opinion, as of the qualities of a person or thing.
- a statement of the approximate charge for work to be done, submitted by a person or business firm ready to undertake the work.
estimating 近义词
judging
更多estimating例句
- These are definitely just estimates, but still, that’s pretty damn good!
- Though reach estimates aren’t available for mobile apps and places now.
- A more thorough analysis would dramatically lower the cost estimate and limit the work needed and the time needed to complete it, Shapery argues.
- An objective and thorough analysis would have produced a much more limited scope of work recommendation, and a dramatically lower cost estimate.
- Best estimates suggest that 10 to 20 percent of students lacked access to devices such as tablets or computers, the internet or both, during the spring shift to online instruction.
- Should capability delivery experience additional changes, this estimate will be revised appropriately.
- There have been at least 50 cases similar to the bathhouse raid in the last 18 months, human-rights groups estimate.
- Just a month from that date, he now no longer believes that to be realistic, and will no longer estimate a timeline for the trial.
- Experts we spoke with said this is a glaring caveat that makes it difficult to create a national estimate from the results.
- While difficult to estimate exact numbers, thousands of Americans die every year because of delayed or denied claims.
- As company after company appeared, we were able to form a pretty exact estimate of their numbers.
- It is impossible to form a just estimate of the Bible without some knowledge of ancient history and comparative mythology.
- It is difficult to over-estimate the harm that has been done to public policy by this same Malthusian theory.
- Without a knowledge of this it is self-evident that no practical estimate of expense to be incurred could possibly be made.
- The funds assigned some years before for the support of the civil list had fallen short of the estimate.