Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    extrapolate
    /ɪkˈstrapəleɪt/

    verb

    • 1. extend the application of (a method or conclusion) to an unknown situation by assuming that existing trends will continue or similar methods will be applicable: "the results cannot be extrapolated to other patient groups"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. EXTRAPOLATE definition: 1. to guess or think about what might happen using information that is already known: 2. to guess…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of EXTRAPOLATE is to predict by projecting past experience or known data. How to use extrapolate in a sentence. The Many Uses of Extrapolate

  4. When you extrapolate, you use specific details to make a general conclusion. For example, if you travel to Canada and encounter only friendly, kind natives, you might extrapolate that all Canadians are friendly.

  5. to guess or think about what might happen using information that is already known: extrapolate something from something You can't really extrapolate a trend from such a small sample. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Concluding and deducing. analysis. deduce something from something. deducible. deductive. diagnosis. draw.

  6. the process of using existing information to discover what is likely to happen or be true in the future: extrapolation of sth The bank expects inflation to overshoot target in two years, but this is only an extrapolation of past trends.

  7. Extrapolate definition: to infer (an unknown) from something that is known; conjecture.. See examples of EXTRAPOLATE used in a sentence.

  8. verb. If you extrapolate from known facts, you use them as a basis for general statements about a situation or about what is likely to happen in the future. [formal] Extrapolating from his American findings, he reckons about 80% of these deaths might be attributed to smoking. [VERB + from]