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[ UK /pɹɪdˈɪkt/ ]
[ US /pɹiˈdɪkt, pɹɪˈdɪkt/ ]
VERB
  1. make a prediction about; tell in advance
    Call the outcome of an election
  2. indicate, as with a sign or an omen
    These signs bode bad news

How To Use predict In A Sentence

  • The study predicted that, by 2022, the country would still require $7.2 billion in foreign aid a year—and that assumes an upsurge of so-far inexistent mining-industry revenue and no dramatic deterioration of security. Afghanistan Seeks Enduring Support
  • Unpredictable, emotional and alive, it is, in keeping with the area, soul with the rough edges intact.
  • It was a metaphor that predicted the nature of the many problems that have beset excessively large inner urban secondary schools in the intervening years. Times, Sunday Times
  • The real issue, they predict, will boil down to fairness and simple human dignity.
  • The Duke's foray into the world of contemporary art yielded equally predictable results. Times, Sunday Times
  • In their opening and closing games England's lumbering back four were hopelessly outmanoeuvred by bursts of fast, mobile, unpredictable attacks, like tankers anchored as speedboats darted around them.
  • A separable reinforced concrete numerical model and fluid-solid interconnection method were used to predict the development of surface bulge in LS-DYNA.
  • Many predict 1991 will rival the great vintage of 1965.
  • This stuff doesn't merely placate the listener with predictable, danceable nursery rhymes but lashes out and lacerates the eardrum relentlessly.
  • It's difficult to predict with any degree of certainty how much it will cost.
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