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projected

[ US /pɹəˈdʒɛktəd/ ]
[ UK /pɹəd‍ʒˈɛktɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. extending out above or beyond a surface or boundary
    the jutting limb of a tree
    his protruding ribs
    massive projected buttresses
    a pile of boards sticking over the end of his truck

How To Use projected In A Sentence

  • Those qualities were instead projected on to a father he had barely known and a figure he invented in fiction. Times, Sunday Times
  • The friction is likely to get rougher if many major economies remain anemic, as projected. China Criticizes U.S. For Protectionism
  • His appeal may lie in the disparity between the image projected in his interviews and the image perpetuated in his records.
  • So the word "incognito" is projected on to the set and floats around ardently pursued by Julian Barratt's mayor. Government Inspector – review
  • The videos were projected onto two screens built to replicate the gnomonic and ‘Robinson projections’ of representing the globe on a two dimensional surface.
  • These images are projected on to screens, and the audience projects its own feelings and fantasies on to those images, layer upon layer upon layer. The Times Literary Supplement
  • As a result of this decomposition very minute bodies, to which the name corpuscles has been given, are projected from the radium atom with exceedingly great velocity. An Elementary Study of Chemistry
  • Too many clubs seem to be spending ridiculous amounts based on projected incomes which are not just unrealistic but beyond the realms of fantasy.
  • He dismissed the idea that raising taxes alone might help erase the deficit, saying "raising taxes doesn't do a dern thing" to address health care costs that are projected to be a big driver of future fiscal problems. Bowles Predicts Support for Deficit Deal
  • Amanda, in an orange sunsuit, had tried of chasing moths and was studying the peculiar afternoon shadow projected across the countryside by Bow Wow Mountain. Another Roadside Attraction
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