generalisation in English

noun
1
a general statement or concept obtained by inference from specific cases.
he was making sweeping generalizations
noun

Use "generalisation" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "generalisation" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "generalisation", or refer to the context using the word "generalisation" in the English Dictionary.

1. 109 Feature generalisation editor (humanFeatureGeneralizationEditor)

2. There are, happily, notable exceptions to this generalisation.

3. Too hasty a generalisation would have misled us.

4. It is unwise to be hasty in generalisation.

5. More formally, as mentioned in the paper and pointed out by ertes, Applicative is a generalisation of the SK combinators; pure is a generalisation of K ::

6. Conjecturing: is the articulation of the generalisation

7. Every generalisation is arrived at, therefore, by induction.

8. The recommendations of the Redcliffe-Maud Commission were the major exception to this generalisation.

9. "This is a gross generalisation, but men focus more on one thing, " she says.

10. Those who oppose or support GM crops per se make an unhelpful generalisation.

11. Generalisation and abstraction, which reflect real-world relationships where objects can inherit properties from their parents, are supported.

12. As with all the economic forces affecting firms' behaviour, the impact of change is uneven and defies generalisation.

13. "A generalisation that faster growth will always compromise plant defence needs to be treated with caution," he warned.

14. Is joy, in contrast to sorrow, a more individual, idiosyncratic emotion about which generalisation is inappropriate?

15. He said: 'As a generalisation, men are less emotionally intelligent than women and have not traditionally been encouraged to share their feelings.

16. This generalisation, however, masks the fact that there are considerable variations from country to country in each of these regions.

17. The Integration of non-university hospitals in clinical trials is absolutely necessary to ensure patient availability and generalisation.

18. It has to be possible to produce spontaneously original sentences which are based on implicit rules which allow generalisation.

19. This is a hard thing to say and I am of course aware that this, too, is a generalisation.

20. One generalisation we can make, though, is that people get more satisfied with their jobs as they get older.

21. Even if marred by partiality and vagueness, this work is easily recognisable as theory, as explanation, not mere descriptive generalisation.

22. 8 Even if marred by partiality and vagueness, this work is easily recognisable as theory, as explanation, not mere descriptive generalisation.

23. Chimps can do all sorts of things we thought that only we could do – like tool-making and abstraction and generalisation.

24. He proposed new operations for the calculus of logic and showed that fuzzy logic was a generalisation of classical and Boolean logic.

25. However, although our observations may back up this generalisation we cannot be sure that it applies to all Virgo's, only those we have observed.

26. This is a generalisation, of course, butbroadly speaking Europeans view football more as a continuum, the USand Japanese as a series of discrete events.

27. In algebraic geometry, the twisted Edwards curves are plane models of elliptic curves, a generalisation of Edwards curves introduced by Bernstein, Birkner, Joye, Lange and Peters in 2008.

28. Generalisation of the classical dual adjunction between ideals of polynomials and affine varieties to many-valued algebras provided an adjunction of the latter with Tychonoff spaces.

29. Finally, we demonstrate the networks have special advantages by simulations, stochastic wavelet neural networks can be considered as a generalisation of wavelet neural networks in essence.

30. Anaphors, agreement and case* HITOSHI SHIRAKI Abstract This article presents an alternative explanation for the Anaphor-Agreement effect, the generalisation that Anaphors do not occur in syntactic position construed with agreement (cf

31. I know it's a generalisation, but I really believe that marriage is not as important for the British and most Europeans as it is for Americans, and the statistics support that view.

32. Instead, most of us – and I include in this generalisation much of the mainstream environmental movement – are still wedded to a vision of the future as an upgraded version of the present.

33. This is a gross generalisation because attraction is such a complex mechanism but men are visual creatures and attraction is more likely, at least in the initial stages, to be based on what they see.

34. The process of conjecturing hinges on being able to recognise a pattern or analogy, in other words, on being able to make a generalisation. As NCTM (1991) stressed, mathematics instruction needs to be orientated away from an emphasis on mechanistic …

35. 2008, Sheila Whiteley, Christmas, Ideology and Popular Culture, Edinburgh University Press →ISBN, page 122 It is important to guard against any hint of a generalisation here that 'less Christmassy music' always accompanies a 'less Christmassy sentiment', and indeed Greg Lake's 'I Believe In Father

36. As expected, just as functors can be derived, the same is true for Adjunctions: (4.14)RF : D(A) → D(B), RF = δ B • F • R A , Derived Isbell dualityWe study a duality result between dg-modules (and also bimodules) which is a vast generalisation of the duality of vector spaces over a field.