pollsters in English

noun
1
a person who conducts or analyzes opinion polls.
The results startled even the pollsters who conducted and analyzed the surveys.
noun
    canvasser

Use "pollsters" in a sentence

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

1. Pollsters have searched in vain for pockets of disloyalty.

2. 15 Pollsters predicted a victory for the government.

3. The market even proved it was more canny than the pollsters by climbing 43 points on polling day itself.

4. And pollsters believe that they may not make up their mind until they enter the polling booth.

5. 2 The major defence pollsters give is that quota samples generally predict the outcome of elections pretty well.

6. 30 Their pollsters have warned that the public understandably reacts negatively when told health benefits may be slashed.

7. Almost 30% of Americans tell pollsters that America is not ready to put a septuagenarian into the White House.

8. • He leaves office with near-record-high approval ratings despite widespread Abhorrence at his personal behavior, pollsters say.

9. Newly powerful pollsters and image makers vie to present their candidate as trustworthy and the opposition as a threat.

10. This is made more grim as most pollsters claim voters have made up their minds well before polling day.

11. Many white voters told pollsters that they would vote for the black candidate but, in the anonymity of the voting booth, they did not.

12. More than 6.7 million Bulgarians are eligible to vote, but pollsters expect a low turnout due to voters' fears of the coronavirus and a slow vaccine rollout

13. The Democratic Party expected a contested 2020 presidential election and "set up" President Donald Trump to try to overturn a "verdict" that should have never been projected by pollsters and declared too soon by the "Complicitous" media, according to political analyst Dick Morris on Newsmax TV