Gauge
in sentence
133 examples of Gauge in a sentence
Peretz was unable to
gauge
the strategic implications of his decisions.
But to
gauge
the relative quality of a country’s education system, researchers would want to determine whether students are actually learning.
If the world is ever to reach parity in development, we must change how we
gauge
and catalogue the quality of policy initiatives.
The scale of the outflow is hard to
gauge.
The second is that the ECB knows that the financial system lacks transparency – and knows that investors know that they cannot
gauge
the impact of an involuntary default, which could cause credit markets to freeze, reprising the aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ collapse in September 2008.
Only then could we
gauge
how strongly investment and innovation would respond to incentives, how much free universal education would cost in the medium term, or how demographic structures would affect different social policies.
NEW YORK – As I try to grasp the full meaning of the Tunisian Revolution and
gauge
its future, I am looking at my desk, where I have spread two issues of TheNew York Times, both featuring Tunisia on their front pages.
For starters, assessing and implementing aid policy requires developing tools to
gauge
accurately where need is greatest.
It is impossible at this point to
gauge
the full extent of the damage with any degree of precision.
Despite these discrepancies, we do have ways to
gauge
the pound’s post-Brexit performance reasonably well.
Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index, the most widely-used benchmark to
gauge
businessmen’s and experts’ beliefs about the extent of corruption in various countries, ranked China 78th out of 158 countries in 2005 – not much improvement from 2000.
The sofware offers nine visualizations that reflect behavior and trends over time, including quality time (a pie chart of whom you spend time with online and offline), pecking order (illustrated with chickens!), blow-off scorecard (relationship asymmetry), and temperature
gauge.
Grading ObamanomicsPALO ALTO – It is still too soon to
gauge
the full economic impact of President Barack Obama’s implemented and proposed policies, but a preliminary read indicates limited short-term benefit at large long-term cost.
Conspicuously, Haiti’s Dominican neighbors were the first to
gauge
the magnitude of the problem and the global nature of the required solution.
Science enables us to
gauge
what we think we know and to identify what we do not.
But profitability should not be an end in itself; it is a tool to help managers determine the most effective use of their resources and
gauge
the company’s competitiveness and vitality.
There will be several ways to
gauge
the election’s relative success.
Others programs, such as Measures for Justice, are creating the data needed to
gauge
results, while non-profits like Pew Charitable Trusts, California Forward, and Third Sector Ventures are helping counties and cities find economically effective alternatives to expensive and ineffective prison expansion.
To
gauge
public opinion in advance of a decision scheduled for later this year on whether to allow commercial planting of GM crops, the British government sponsored (at great expense) a series of public discussions around the country.
While it is true that surging M2 can reflect excessive leverage, it is not a particularly accurate
gauge
in China, where commercial banks can easily circumvent high reserve requirements and quantitative controls by moving loans off their balance sheets to wealth-management products – practices that fuel artificial credit expansion that looks like M2 growth.
Life at the South China Morning Post , Hong Kong's leading English language newspaper, and so a visible political gauge, offers a window into what is going on all across Hong Kong's institutions.
In order to
gauge
how people’s Facebook “News Feeds” affect their moods, the company temporarily implemented a new algorithm to display slightly more positive messages to some users, and slightly gloomier ones to others.
One solution would be to establish a continuing program of research into the measurement implications of emerging economic trends, conducting one-off studies at first to
gauge
their potential quantitative importance.
Finally, the health department created a system to
gauge
statistically the quality of the care it was delivering.
Inequality’s precise impact on individual well-being remains controversial, partly because of the complex nature of the metrics needed to
gauge
it accurately.
In the postcommunist transition countries this is an old story: bureaucrats
gauge
bribes; insiders rig privatization auctions.
There are signs that the Syrians are unable to
gauge
American intentions on other issues as well.
Although it is difficult to
gauge
the long-run health consequences, there is abundant evidence that obesity contributes significantly to higher rates of type II diabetes, heart attacks, and certain types of cancer.
For starters, finance provides an accurate yardstick to
gauge
if deeds are consistent with words.
First, it is difficult to
gauge
popular sentiment outside the capital.
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