generalize - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of generalize in Hindi

  • सामान्यीकरण
  • सामान्यीकरण करना
  • व्यापक बनाना

Verb

  • अस्पष्ट बोलना
  • सामान्य सिद्धान्त बना लेना
  • अस्पष्ट कहना
  • विशेष से सामान्य अनुमान निकालना

generalize Definition

Verb

  • make a general or broad statement by inferring from specific cases.
  • make (something) more widespread or widely applicable.

generalize Example

  • attempts to generalize an elite education ( कुलीन शिक्षा को सामान्य बनाने का प्रयास ) 
  • it is tempting to generalize from these conclusions ( इन निष्कर्षों से सामान्यीकरण करना आकर्षक है )
  • That said, it is still impossible to generalize. ( इन निष्कर्षों से सामान्यीकरण करना आकर्षक है )
  • Most people-I've noticed-tend to generalize barbeque as meat. ( अधिकांश लोग-मैंने देखा है-बार्बेक्यू को मांस के रूप में सामान्यीकृत करते हैं। )

More Sentence

  • Some of the details she had forgotten, as she grew more and more to generalize.
  • I told Debra not to generalize by stating that all Chinese businesses are corrupt just because she had a bad experience with one of them.  
  • Painting with a wide brush Garry began to generalize, claiming that every politician is a fraud and only out for himself.  
  • If you generalize this, the most favorite TEDTalks are those that feature topics we can connect with, both easily and deeply, such as happiness, our own body, food, emotions.
  • Bill argues that a real historian will stick to the facts, without attempting to generalize based on what is known to be true.
  • And one furthermore has the impulse to generalize, as much as possible, in defining who that enemy is.
  • It is easy to generalize that all poor people had an inferior education, however such an argument cannot be supported by the facts.
  • I don’t mean to generalize, but based on my experience I am tempted to say that everyone on the planning board is corrupt except for Larry.
  • A deduction is often like an induction, in inferring from particulars; the difference is that deduction combines a law in the major with the particulars in the minor premise, and infers syllogistically that the particulars of the minor have the predicate of the major premise, whereas induction uses the particulars simply as instances to generalize a law.
  • A citizen of Athens, who had known the evils of the border-war between Thebes and Phocis, would readily perceive the analogy of a similar war between Thebes and Athens, and conclude analogously that it would be evil; but he would have to generalize the similarity of all border-wars in order to draw the inductive conclusion that all alike are evil.
  • many of the results generalize to multibody structures
  • it is not easy to generalize about the poor