Sentence examples for to gauging from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

to gauging

noun

A measure; a standard of measure; an instrument to determine dimensions, distance, or capacity; a standard

Exact(44)

In October 2010 the IMF called for belt-tightening and turned to gauging its probable impact.

Skills in picking stocks, as opposed to gauging broad economic trends, will now be more important, he contended.

The government workers are not the only ones who are "making do" when it comes to gauging the nutritional status of children in India.

Indeed, when it comes to gauging the value of education, considering only payback is seldom sound, especially for programs steeped in traditions of "knowledge for knowledge's sake".

Twitter makes an effort to monitor abuse; Harvey has teams, in both Dublin and San Francisco, of a few dozen people devoted to gauging the extent of danger.

That data is crucial to gauging whether executive pay is excessive and how pay disparities affect company performance and the economy.

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Similar(15)

"It's hard to gauge.

Hard to gauge.

Humor is hard to gauge, of course.

For Nova, confidence is tricky to gauge.

Precise numbers are difficult to gauge.

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