Most franchisors will not make earnings claims, but will provide information with which you could potentially extrapolate gross sales figures. |
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From the evidence found on the Moon, geophysicists can extrapolate a picture of the early history of the four terrestrial planets. |
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It does not require even half an education to guess why he feels obliged to adduce flimsy evidence and extrapolate fanciful conclusions from it. |
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We can, however, extrapolate the photospheric magnetic field into the corona. |
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Indologists like to extrapolate the peaceableness of the Hindus from a reading of philosophical texts. |
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Results-wise, it's difficult to extrapolate from inferred arachnoid motivations to the human mental-state. |
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The computational model can extrapolate the morphogenetic movements of human organs such as the eye, heart, lung etc. |
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It's part of their job to extrapolate from current trends, anticipate future problems, and head them off at the pass. |
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It may be difficult to extrapolate our findings to contemporary parturient women. |
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In vitro experiments on cell proliferation, membrane properties, and ion channels are difficult to extrapolate to humans. |
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We will be voting for people, not parties, they say, so don't extrapolate the results into a national trend. |
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From his experiences in Celebration, he attempts to extrapolate the condition of America's communities, families and social organisations. |
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What nobody has done yet, though, is to extrapolate these plans into other crisis areas where too many reporters chomp around disruptively in too little space. |
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Incidentally, if futurists wish to extrapolate well, they must not be slow to recognise change. |
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The evidence needed for sound policymaking should thus be much more comprehensive than attempts to extrapolate dubious principles from the findings of controlled trials. |
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During that time, I've seen numerous threat briefings that attempted to extrapolate possible terrorist strategies out of the most obscure bits of intelligence. |
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It is difficult to extrapolate from those specific mandates a wider right that would exist in different circumstances. |
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But we can extrapolate from previous experience that decapitation does incentivize Hamas to ease up on its attacks. |
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The axiom of uniformity of law is necessary in order for scientists to extrapolate inductive inference into the unobservable past. |
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It will make reference to the most populous groups and extrapolate these issues to the wider TC group. |
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The study used data collected from 11 states to extrapolate rates for the US as a whole. |
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A sound pension should plan for the time on the bottom, not extrapolate from the moment on top. |
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Use test results obtained with one raw material to extrapolate the ultimate anaerobic degradability of structurally related surfactants. |
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Scientists study a piece of the system and then they try to extrapolate from that what's happening with the entire part. |
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This makes it impossible to extrapolate the half-year results on a linear basis and draw conclusions regarding the expected annual result. |
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It is perilous to extrapolate from a study of disturbances by small aircraft to draw conclusions about disturbances by army jets. |
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So a real problem that we face is trying to extrapolate from that little area to the large area of the seafloor. |
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In this way, NITA has been able to extrapolate from the experience of other markets. |
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This assumes that we can extrapolate in the future the current rates of return on this human capital. |
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This information is used to extrapolate the knowledge obtained from the specific flux sites in both space and time. |
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The most simple way to apply this is to extrapolate total margin output by a volume index of turnover. |
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It was however becoming increasingly risky to extrapolate these results both over time and to all the enterprises in the sector. |
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We could not therefore study only one office or one school and extrapolate to the rest. |
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Because of the nature of judgemental sampling, it is not possible to extrapolate the findings to the whole population. |
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The tendency to under-react to information and to extrapolate recent price developments into the future is a major bias in investor behavior. |
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One might use the identification of an index fossil in the field to extrapolate or to assume that the particular zone or assemblage was represented. |
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While animal studies have suggested an aetiological role for high fat intake in colorectal carcinogenesis, such evidence is very hard to extrapolate to humans living freely. |
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If a comparator did not have local staff in all the Commission's groups, the salaries of the groups it did have would be used to extrapolate theoretical salaries for the missing groups. |
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We can use evidence from the present to extrapolate about the past. |
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When the only thing known is the target of the attack, it is very dubious to extrapolate to the thinking that may have motivated a hacker, terrorist, mercenary, activist, ordinary criminal or prankster. |
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The SME is not a multinational in miniature, any more than it suffices to extrapolate the difficulties of a small business quantitatively to get a proper grasp of the problems of large units. |
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In the absence of more comprehensive quality control records, however, it is not possible to extrapolate degradation rates for Iraqi nerve agents over longer periods of time. |
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It also completely removes the ability to extrapolate a causal sequence from the works. |
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It's important for every musician to be able to extrapolate in situations where one section has to be drawn out, for example, or where another has to be drastically cut short with just a few measures' warning. |
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We'll be able to extrapolate the asteroid's motion hundreds of years into the past and into the future. |
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Orthography is conventionalized, and grammarians' comments lack clarity, so that to a considerable extent it is necessary to extrapolate from later developments in Romance in order to describe it. |
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The question was how to extrapolate a general framework for regulation that incorporated a minimum universal set of standards from all the regional perspectives. |
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Smoothed isopleths give a more clear overview of the deposit and allow to extrapolate the data beyond the data points. |
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In particular, behavioural economists have argued that human beings tend to be too confident of their own abilities and tend to extrapolate recent trends into the future, a combination that may contribute to bubbles. |
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If the recent uptick in sales proves short-lived, retailers who extrapolate from the latest numbers will spend a miserable holiday season trying to offload unwanted stock at crippling discounts. |
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Given that the sample size is 10 families in each country, the researchers will need to be cautious in how they report and extrapolate their findings. |
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It is informative but it does not directly extrapolate one from the other. |
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Some advocates of a la carte extrapolate from the carriage fees that cable TV and other platforms pay, but this is a bulk-buy wholesale figure. |
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Researchers attempt to extrapolate conception dates by comparing fetus size and characteristics with newborns. |
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If you can extrapolate from that into the industry at large, you'll be amazed what a positive effect my fish farm has had on the Lois Lake fish community. |
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While obtaining the population lists of clients took longer than expected, the delay was necessary to ensure a large enough client sample size in order to extrapolate the survey findings. |
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But it would be unjustified to extrapolate on the basis of short-term parameters that reduced the demand for allowances during the fall and the early winter. |
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How far one is willing to extrapolate the axioms of uniformity of law and process into the past, depends upon which paradigm one chooses to work within. |
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It is possible, however, to extrapolate to absolute zero by using the ideal gas law, as shown in the figure. |
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The book is overflowing with fresh insights, recastings of old debates, new ways to extrapolate evidence, realignments of theoretical traditions, improved translations, etc. |
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We can extrapolate the number of new students entering next year by looking at how many entered in previous years. |
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With such a small study it is impossible to extrapolate accurately. |
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