estimated
1estimated — UK US adjective An estimated 300,000 people came to the demonstration. Thesaurus: describing and introducing guesseshyponym to guesssynonym Main entry: estimate * * * estimated adj …
2estimated — adj. calculated approximately; as, an estimated mass of 25 g. [WordNet 1.5] …
3estimated — UK US /ˈestɪmeɪtɪd/ US / ṱɪd/ adjective [before noun] ► used when saying what the cost, size, value, etc. of something is believed to be, although it is not known for certain: »The business is worth an estimated $250 million. »The estimated… …
4estimated — index approximate, inexact Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
5estimated — at about, as in The crowd was estimated at about 50,000, is wrong. Because estimated contains the idea of an approximation, about is superfluous. Delete it …
6estimated — / estɪmeɪtɪd/ adjective calculated approximately ● estimated sales ● Costs were slightly more than the estimated figure …
7estimated — / estɪmeɪtɪd/ adjective calculated approximately ● estimated sales ● Costs were slightly more than the estimated figure …
8Estimated — Estimate Es ti*mate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Estimated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Estimating}.] [L. aestimatus, p. p. of aestimare. See {Esteem}, v. t.] 1. To judge and form an opinion of the value of, from imperfect data, either the extrinsic (money), or… …
9estimated — adj. Estimated is used with these nouns: ↑cost, ↑distance, ↑expenditure, ↑frequency, ↑saving, ↑total, ↑value, ↑worth …
10estimated — The equivalent of more or less. Jeffreys v Weekly, 81 Or 140, 158 P 522. Appearing in a written contract, an indication that the quantity or amount of the subject matter is not attempted to be stated with mathematical exactness, and that the… …