View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Generalise.

Generalise

Generalise | Generalised

Generalise meaning

Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of generalize.

Example sentences (17)

But it’s still “too early to generalise” about white-collar redundancies by extrapolating from the wave of tech announcements, Broer said.

Of course, it doesn’t do to generalise: there are plenty of older people who love new music.

One, one thing that we’re already thinking a lot about, and actually onboarding a number of partners for is this idea that we have of trying to generalise carbon credits.

As for the larger more extensive research cited, it is all on uni students and again it’s not valid to generalise to the broader population based on such a narrow sample that is NOT representative or even random.

It’s impossible to generalise, though almost all young travellers now will be just a phone call away, unlike in the past.

I won’t generalise that such a feeling is shared by all Muslims but a large section does feel so, especially the older generation that was either born before Partition or grew up listening to the horror stories of Partition.

Only a brave soul would generalise the result to the magic date in 2019.

We cannot conclude or generalise on the rest of the day.

We live in times where male bashing has become a norm and we generalise every man as some sort of animal, who will pounce and destroy woman’s dignity.

Coxeter (1973) Attempts to generalise the Euler characteristic of polyhedra to higher-dimensional polytopes led to the development of topology and the treatment of a decomposition or CW-complex as analogous to a polytope.

During this time he helped to generalise the strategy and tactics of the Bolsheviks to newly formed Communist parties across Europe and further afield.

Fields main The fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers given in (2)–(5) above, can be used to generalise the notion of absolute value to an arbitrary field, as follows.

French and Catalan did the same, but tended to generalise the third conjugation infinitive instead.

However, he did not generalise or elaborate on this, and the general law was enunciated by French physicist Charles-Augustin de Coulomb in the 1780s.

Other dimensions With the exception of the cross and triple products, the above formulae generalise to two dimensions and higher dimensions.

Then we generalise to an arbitrary family of arbitrary modules.

Vector spaces main Again the fundamental properties of the absolute value for real numbers can be used, with a slight modification, to generalise the notion to an arbitrary vector space.