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"prognosticate" Definitions
  1. to foretell from signs or symptoms : PREDICT
  2. to give an indication of in advance : FORESHADOW

31 Sentences With "prognosticate"

How to use prognosticate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "prognosticate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "prognosticate". Mastering all the usages of "prognosticate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

They prognosticate on what the president, his staff, or his party should do.
"It's hard to prognosticate and guess at what's going to happen," said Lipschutz.
Well, when was the last time you heard a doctor prognosticate something like this?
The liberal and conservative options are the easiest to prognosticate about, so we'll dispense with them first.
Breakingviews Talking shops should do more than simply gloomily prognosticate or ardently cheer, even for financial technology.
Not as bad as some Remainers prognosticate (neither societal meltdown nor economic collapse are really on the cards).
Trying to prognosticate about which volcanoes might erupt is about as predictable as who will make this year's baseball playoffs.
It's still very early days for monetizing personal assistants — Amazon has declined to prognosticate on Alexa as a revenue stream for years.
" The oracles "prognosticate in the time-honored manner of oracles littered all over B movies and pulp ­science-fiction and fantasy novels.
It is among a group of insurers that will scale back their Obamacare bets in 2017, but does not prognosticate doom for the marketplaces.
In a battle with so many actors and interests at stake, it is hard to prognosticate on what the outcome here is going to be.
Astrologers have been studying the birth charts of politicians and other public figures for years, in an attempt to prognosticate their impact on the world.
Beyond the brands and the parties and the barbecue, it's a place where people come and prognosticate about technology and what it'll look like years from now.
So they harangue you at those parties, tweet, hold forth on conference panels, tweet, prognosticate on podcasts, tweet, host meetups, tweet, publish ghostwritten blog posts, and also: tweet.
I'm no all-seeing Three-Eyed Raven, and I prefer not to prognosticate about plot as a rule; it feels less like writing criticism and more like writing fanfic.
But a half dozen people involved with Patrick's informal discussions were loath to prognosticate about what Patrick will ultimately decide, when the word from on high is to be patient.
"He got substantial blowback for those comments and was advised — and took the advice — not to prognosticate on the market again," said Jason Furman, who was one of Mr. Obama's economic advisers.
Hopefully, Audi owners won't abuse the power that comes with being able to prognosticate when all the lights will turn green by driving recklessly or endangering the lives of other drivers and pedestrians.
"We warned DC pundits not to hastily prognosticate because even two weeks ago it was clear former State Senator Lisa Brown's liberal record had reached its ceiling in Eastern Washington," the spokesperson wrote.
And in the wake of a string of disappointing IPOs this year, from Uber and Lyft to Peloton, there was a palpable need among the guests to commiserate about the state of affairs, prognosticate about the future and find someone, or something, to blame.
When you think about those kind of numbers and that kind of magnitude of an increase in unemployment and shock to the system, it's way too early to be trying to call a bottom or prognosticate how much further (the market) could go down.
He's less inclined to prognosticate about solutions than he is to talk about the problems that will need to be addressed in the future — whether it's the "meta problem" of climate change; the threats and promises of artificial intelligence; or just how, exactly, society's acceptance of new technology will match the rapid pace of innovation.
But over years of covering the Oscars, living life according to a calendar dictated by the awards season — the fall festivals, the late-year prestige releases, the votes and awards galas, and, finally, the hectic weeks of scrambling to prognosticate who will win and mind-read the Academy that gives out the statuettes — I have begrudgingly come to understand that there might be some reason, if not to love the Oscars, then to at least see why they matter.
Epub 2016 Nov 30. It is not uncommon to undergo cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), which measures the heart's response to exercise, to assess the functional impairment caused by hypertrophy and to prognosticate outcomes.Prognostic value of exercise echocardiography in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Peteiro J, Bouzas-Mosquera A, Fernandez X, Monserrat L, Pazos P, Estevez-Loureiro R, Castro-Beiras A J Am Soc Echocardiogr.
Shakespeare uses the portentous polysyllabic verb prognosticate with the alliteration 'doom and date' which is the stock in the trade of astrologers. This is Shakespeare's prognostication, and it is delivered with a smile. West believed this due to the emphasis against the metre on 'this'. Line 14 is saying that when one is dead, their truths and beauties come to an end as well.
After English Civil War, Samuel Hartlib and his Baconian community promoted scientific application, which showed the popularity of utility. For William Petty, the administrators should be "skilled in the best rules of judicial astrology" to "calculate the events of diseases and prognosticate the weather." Institutionally, Gresham College propagated scientific advancement to a larger audience like tradesmen, and later this institute grew into Royal Society. William Cuningham illustrated the utilitarian function of cosmography by the military implement of maps.
He was found dead in his bed at the Zenobia building after a bout of tonsilitis. The New York Times compared his theatre building, though short-lived, to Oscar Hammerstein I's.Bim the button man found dead in bed; Meyer R. Bimberg was equally famous as a theatre builder and maker of emblems March 26, 1908 New York Times A heavyset redhead, Bim used personal connections to help prognosticate the outcome of elections.Serious and Frivolous Facts Volume 179, Issue 2 G. Graham, 1906 Saturday Evening Post His brother Edward Bimberg was the proprietor of the Palm Garden on 52nd Street after a career on the vaudeville stage.
Her acting was equally restrained, but the inward spirit > could not be altogether subdued, and she occasionally broke forth into > silvery and impassioned notes, and abandoned herself to that natural gaiety > of song that rendered her in the scene the most captivating of coquettes. > Had Tadolini known that the Times has ears everywhere, she might have > exerted herself to please them; but criticism has art and judgment, and > though she sung at mezzo voce,The author is referring to mezza voce, an > Italian musical term meaning "half voice", i.e., singing with subdued or > moderated volume. it was not difficult to prognosticate complete success for > her at Her Majesty's Theatre.
Among other things he told me that, some ten years before, a young man had come to the city and had given, like me practical demonstrations of the resources of our art; this young man was put to death by poison, together with two servants who accompanied him."Arthur John Brock, 1929, Greek Medicine, London: J.M. Dent and Songs, Ltd., page 212. Garcia-Ballester says the following of Galen’s use of prognosis: "In modern medicine, we are used to distinguishing between the diagnostic judgment (the scientific knowledge of what a patient has) and the prognostic judgment (the conjecture about what will happen to him.) For Galen, to understand a clinical case technically, ‘to diagnose’, was, among other things, to know with greater or lesser certainty the outcome for the patient, ‘to prognosticate’.
Rumack Matthew Nomogram with treatment line added at 150 Rumack-Matthew Nomogram The Rumack-Matthew nomogram, also known as Rumack-Matthews nomogram or the acetaminophen nomogram is an acetaminophen toxicity nomogram plotting serum concentration of acetaminophen against the time since ingestion in an attempt to prognosticate possible liver toxicity as well as allowing a clinician to decide whether to proceed with N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) treatment or not. It is a logarithmic graph starting not directly from ingestion, but from 4 hours post ingestion after absorption is considered likely to be complete. In hands of skilled clinicians this nomogram allows for timely management of acetaminophen overdose. Generally, a serum plasma concentration (APAP) of 140–150 microgram/mL (or milligrams/L) at 4 hours post ingestion, indicates the need for NAC treatment.
When the actual physical limits of the planet, in other words, seem to endanger technology, it finds a way to make the planet itself a device to be managed and sustained. The chapter and Part 2 end with a fascinating number of pages in which Borgmann tries to prognosticate on the topic of the upcoming (for him in 1984) “microelectronic revolution”—i.e., e.g., computers (148-153). The book has an admirably forward-looking sense of how big microelectronics will impact this entire issue, and ends by arguing—unsurprisingly—that they will be, however, “not revolutionary at all” “in another sense,” because they will only serve to further entrench the device paradigm. He thus ends by noting the need for “counterforces to technology,” the “focal practices” which will be the concern of Part 3 (153).

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