How to Use extrapolate in a Sentence
extrapolate
verb- We can extrapolate the number of new students entering next year by looking at how many entered in previous years.
- With such a small study it is impossible to extrapolate accurately.
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But the coach is careful not to extrapolate too much from one play like that.
— Katherine Fitzgerald, azcentral, 4 Nov. 2019 -
One option is to record whale calls and try to extrapolate from that.
— Cathleen O'Grady, Ars Technica, 26 Feb. 2020 -
The odds are that less of the language is needed to extrapolate what the language consists of.
— Lance Eliot, Forbes, 19 Apr. 2023 -
That said, the automaker did tell us to look at the difference in price between the CX-50 and the CX-5 and extrapolate from there.
— Andrew Krok, Car and Driver, 31 Jan. 2023 -
Don't extrapolate and think that all pit bulls do this.
— Tom Junod, Esquire, 14 July 2014 -
Don’t be put off by the paces these athletes run—extrapolate the lesson to your pace.
— Carl Leivers, Outside Online, 20 June 2019 -
This would be good for one of the best offenses in the N.B.A., extrapolated over a full season.
— New York Times, 24 Jan. 2020 -
That should help scientists extrapolate from the little crime-scene shards left in sharks to the full swordfish that did the deed.
— Joshua Sokol, New York Times, 27 Oct. 2020 -
And before that seed has time to blossom, there are people who glom on and extrapolate way too far.
— Angela Chen, The Verge, 7 Aug. 2018 -
If fish have gills to extrapolate oxygen from the water even at depth, how do mudskippers breathe in the open air?
— Sofia Quaglia, Discover Magazine, 9 May 2023 -
But Mason said the new report can’t be used to extrapolate the total spilled from the Taylor site.
— Washington Post, 24 June 2019 -
Now, extrapolate that process over the thousands of parts that go into a computer or a car.
— Benny Buller, Forbes, 8 Mar. 2023 -
The authors then extrapolated their findings across the top 30-refugee hosting countries, which host 90% of the world's refugees.
— Bernhard Warner, Fortune, 25 July 2019 -
But can Gose take those initial successes and extrapolate them out over the course of an entire season for the Guardians in 2022?
— Joe Noga, cleveland, 1 Dec. 2021 -
This panel extrapolates one the future of clubbing culture and imagines what the dance floor could look like in 2030.
— Kat Bein, Billboard, 14 Oct. 2019 -
In the most studies focus on or the , and the data cannot be extrapolated to the novel coronavirus.
— Washington Post, 10 Mar. 2020 -
The company then extrapolates those numbers to come up with the data.
— Marco Santana, OrlandoSentinel.com, 7 June 2018 -
From that base of survey data, the researchers extrapolated to the whole island and came up with a range of excess deaths.
— Washington Post, 4 June 2018 -
One tried and true method is to extrapolate the age of the oldest craters from the characteristics of the planet’s newest ones.
— Daniel Oberhaus, Wired, 19 Jan. 2021 -
Researchers have to extrapolate from the number of nests observed.
— The Economist, 22 Feb. 2018 -
All of that is true, and extrapolating outward from this race to future races is therefore fraught.
— Philip Bump, Washington Post, 12 Dec. 2017 -
Not much can be extrapolated from that game, plain and simple.
— Daniel Rapaport, SI.com, 14 Jan. 2018 -
The new minute-long teaser for The First Omen doesn’t extrapolate much on this plot synopsis, but it is stuffed with sinister vibes.
— Jon Blistein, Rolling Stone, 3 Jan. 2024 -
Can’t help but maybe extrapolate that perhaps the Jazz just aren’t really good enough.
— Eric Walden, The Salt Lake Tribune, 15 Mar. 2022 -
Not to mention how to extrapolate the effects of the drug on people over 70, the maximum age at which the study enrolled patients.
— Michael Nedelman, CNN, 31 July 2019 -
But the work involved more than just extrapolating that data back over the three billion years it’s taken Mars to dry out.
— Jeffrey Kluger, TIME, 6 Sep. 2024 -
Calhoun wasn’t shy about extrapolating to our own species’ fate.
— Ben Goldfarb, Scientific American, 17 Sep. 2024 -
The researchers wanted to know whether the AI model with the cyclones removed could extrapolate from weaker weather events present in the training set to stronger, unseen weather extremes.
— Samuel Burke, Fortune, 29 Oct. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'extrapolate.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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