Averagely


a quantity, rating, or the like that represents or approximates an arithmetic mean:
Her golf average is in the 90s. My average in science has gone from B to C this semester.
a typical amount, rate, degree, etc.; norm.
Statistics. arithmetic mean.
Mathematics. a quantity intermediate to a set of quantities.
Commerce.

a charge paid by the master of a ship for such services as pilotage or towage.
an expense, partial loss, or damage to a ship or cargo.
the incidence of such an expense or loss to the owners or their insurers.
an equitable apportionment among all the interested parties of such an expense or loss.
Compare general average, particular average.

of or relating to an average; estimated by average; forming an average:
The average rainfall there is 180 inches.
typical; common; ordinary:
The average secretary couldn’t handle such a workload. His grades were nothing special, only average.
to find an average value for (a variable quantity); reduce to a mean:
We averaged the price of milk in five neighborhood stores.
(of a variable quantity) to have as its arithmetic mean:
Wheat averages 56 pounds to a bushel.
to do or have on the average:
He averages seven hours of sleep a night.
to have or show an average:
to average as expected.
average down, to purchase more of a security or commodity at a lower price to reduce the average cost of one’s holdings.
average out,

to come out of a security or commodity transaction with a profit or without a loss.
to reach an average or other figure:
His taxes should average out to about a fifth of his income.

average up, to purchase more of a security or commodity at a higher price to take advantage of a contemplated further rise in prices.
on the / an average, usually; typically:
She can read 50 pages an hour, on the average.
Historical Examples

Those two coming now consisted of two better than averagely dressed girls who would run somewhere in their early twenties.
Combat Dallas McCord Reynolds

I know that his putting was extraordinarily good—far better than an averagely good putter’s daylight putting.
Fifty Years of Golf Horace G. Hutchinson

More comfortable would be a role as an averagely anti-Russian tourist—not fanatically so, but averagely.
Combat Dallas McCord Reynolds

I am, so far as these are concerned, merely the man in the street, the averagely endowed and the ordinarily educated.
Memoirs of My Dead Life George Moore

noun
the typical or normal amount, quality, degree, etc: above average in intelligence
Also called arithmetic mean. the result obtained by adding the numbers or quantities in a set and dividing the total by the number of members in the set: the average of 3, 4, and 8 is 5
(of a continuously variable ratio, such as speed) the quotient of the differences between the initial and final values of the two quantities that make up the ratio: his average over the journey was 30 miles per hour
(maritime law)

a loss incurred or damage suffered by a ship or its cargo at sea
the equitable apportionment of such loss among the interested parties

(often pl) (stock exchange) a simple or weighted average of the prices of a selected group of securities computed in order to facilitate market comparisons
on average, on the average, on an average, usually; typically: on average, he goes twice a week
adjective
usual or typical
mediocre or inferior: his performance was only average
constituting a numerical average: the average age, an average speed
approximately typical of a range of values: the average contents of a matchbox
verb
(transitive) to obtain or estimate a numerical average of
(transitive) to assess the general quality of
(transitive) to perform or receive a typical number of: to average eight hours’ work a day
(transitive) to divide up proportionately: they averaged the profits among the staff
(transitive) to amount to or be on average: the children averaged 15 years of age
(intransitive) (stock exchange) to purchase additional securities in a holding whose price has fallen (average down) or risen (average up) in anticipation of a speculative profit after further increases in price
n.

late 15c., “financial loss incurred through damage to goods in transit,” from French avarie “damage to ship,” and Italian avaria; a word from 12c. Mediterranean maritime trade (cf. Spanish averia; other Germanic forms, Dutch avarij, German haferei, etc., also are from Romanic languages), of uncertain origin. Sometimes traced to Arabic ‘arwariya “damaged merchandise,” but this might as easily be a borrowing of the word from the Franks. Meaning shifted to “equal sharing of such loss by the interested parties.” Transferred sense of “statement of a medial estimate” is first recorded 1735. The mathematical extension is from 1755.
adj.

1770; see average (n.).
v.

1769, from average (n.). Related: Averaged; averaging.

average av·er·age (āv’ər-ĭj, āv’rĭj)
n.

A number that typifies a set of numbers of which it is a function.

See arithmetic mean.

An intermediate level or degree.

adj.

Of, relating to, or constituting an average.

Being intermediate between extremes, as on a scale.

v. av·er·aged, av·er·ag·ing, av·er·ag·es

To calculate the average of.

To do or have an average of.

To distribute proportionately, as over a period of time.

average
(āv’ər-ĭj)
A number, especially the arithmetic mean, that is derived from and considered typical or representative of a set of numbers. Compare arithmetic mean, median, mode.

A single number that represents a set of numbers. Means, medians, and modes are kinds of averages; usually, however, the term average refers to a mean.

Read Also:

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    a quantity, rating, or the like that represents or approximates an arithmetic mean: Her golf average is in the 90s. My average in science has gone from B to C this semester. a typical amount, rate, degree, etc.; norm. Statistics. arithmetic mean. Mathematics. a quantity intermediate to a set of quantities. Commerce. a charge paid […]

  • Averil

    a male given name. Historical Examples And the grown-up children—how many are there who live with my cousin Averil? Averil Rosa Nouchette Carey “I should have liked them to-day, if possible,” replied Lord Averil. The Shadow of Ashlydyat Mrs. Henry Wood “Ask my father what he thinks of Averil,” was Frank’s reply. Averil Rosa Nouchette […]

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    the act of averring. a positive statement. Historical Examples It is an averment of a conclusion of law which is permitted to abridge the facts (positive and negative) on which it is founded. The Common Law Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. The latter case shows the averment of negligence to have been mere form. The Common […]

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    a lake near Naples, Italy, looked upon in ancient times as an entrance to hell, from whose waters vile-smelling vapors arose, supposedly killing birds flying over it. hell.

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    a crater lake in S Italy, near Naples and the Tyrrhenian Sea, thought by ancients to be the entrance to the underworld. (the) descent to hell is easy; it is easy to take the downward path. Vergil, Aeneid, 6:126. Historical Examples Monte Nuovo,—is a mountain in the environs of Naples, which blocks up the valley […]


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