[
UK
/pˈɒlstɐ/
]
[ US /ˈpoʊɫstɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈpoʊɫstɝ/ ]
NOUN
-
someone who conducts surveys of public opinion
a pollster conducts public opinion polls
a headcounter counts heads
How To Use pollster In A Sentence
- The authors, both pollsters, will either win plaudits in future years or be forgotten like many hyperbolic, wrong-headed forecasters through the eons. Three books on the Tea Party, reviewed by Steven Levingston
- Even in the United States, where the private media are almost invariably subservient to corporate interests, journalists generally do not cite polls by pollsters who have publicly partisan connections.
- He leaves office with near-record-high approval ratings despite widespread abhorrence at his personal behavior, pollsters say.
- While most pollsters say they would contact clients whose analyses didn't tally with the numbers, few ever do.
- In short, a majority of Americans, according to pollsters, decidedly prefer interparty consensus to interparty conflict. Party rivalry past and present
- Our pollsters also asked voters to ignore how much they liked the three party leaders and say if they understood what the men stood for. The Sun
- Comparisons between polls done by competing pollsters are absolutely meaningless.
- The latest row arises from an apparent attempt by his closest aide to silence one of the pollsters.
- This practice, along with continued ‘sugging’ and ‘frugging,’ accelerates the tend, as Democratic pollster Mark Melman observed in a 1996 interview with John Nielson broadcast on National Public Radio's ‘All Things Considered.’
- | Reply | Permalink what polls? pollster. com, the largest aggregate state by state poller has Obama 'safe' in more than enough states to win already, based on current polling. GOP Strategist Accuses Obama Of Trying To Start "Race War"