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All quantitate synonyms

quan·ti·tate
Q q

verb quantitate

  • judge — Alan L(aVern) born 1932, U.S. astronaut.
  • measure — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
  • appraise — If you appraise something or someone, you consider them carefully and form an opinion about them.
  • ascertain — If you ascertain the truth about something, you find out what it is, especially by making a deliberate effort to do so.
  • assess — When you assess a person, thing, or situation, you consider them in order to make a judgment about them.
  • calculate — If you calculate a number or amount, you discover it from information that you already have, by using arithmetic, mathematics, or a special machine.
  • calibrate — If you calibrate an instrument or tool, you mark or adjust it so that you can use it to measure something accurately.
  • determine — If a particular factor determines the nature of a thing or event, it causes it to be of a particular kind.
  • evaluate — Form an idea of the amount, number, or value of; assess.
  • guess — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
  • quantify — to determine, indicate, or express the quantity of.
  • take account of — an oral or written description of particular events or situations; narrative: an account of the meetings; an account of the trip.
  • weigh — to determine or ascertain the force that gravitation exerts upon (a person or thing) by use of a balance, scale, or other mechanical device: to weigh oneself; to weigh potatoes; to weigh gases.
  • adjudge — If someone is adjudged to be something, they are judged or considered to be that thing.
  • cheque — A cheque is a printed form on which you write an amount of money and who it is to be paid to. Your bank then pays the money to that person from your account.
  • check — Check is also a noun.
  • compute — To compute a quantity or number means to calculate it.
  • count — A Count is a European nobleman with the same rank as an English earl.
  • estimate — Roughly calculate or judge the value, number, quantity, or extent of.
  • eye — Each of a pair of globular organs in the head through which people and vertebrate animals see, the visible part typically appearing almond-shaped in animals with eyelids.
  • figure — a numerical symbol, especially an Arabic numeral.
  • guesstimate — to estimate without substantial basis in facts or statistics.
  • metre — an instrument for measuring, especially one that automatically measures and records the quantity of something, as of gas, water, miles, or time, when it is activated.
  • meter — an instrument for measuring, especially one that automatically measures and records the quantity of something, as of gas, water, miles, or time, when it is activated.
  • peg — a female given name, form of Peggy.
  • rate — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • reckon — to count, compute, or calculate, as in number or amount.
  • scale — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • size — any of various gelatinous or glutinous preparations made from glue, starch, etc., used for filling the pores of cloth, paper, etc., or as an adhesive ground for gold leaf on books.
  • tally — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
  • value — relative worth, merit, or importance: the value of a college education; the value of a queen in chess.
  • check out — When you check out of a hotel or clinic where you have been staying, or if someone checks you out, you pay the bill and leave.
  • figure in — a numerical symbol, especially an Arabic numeral.
  • look over — the act of looking: a look of inquiry.
  • size up — the spatial dimensions, proportions, magnitude, or bulk of anything: the size of a farm; the size of the fish you caught.
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