statistically
English
Etymology
From statistical + -ly.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stəˈtɪs.tɪ.kə.li/, [stəˈtɪs.tɪ.kl̩.i], /stəˈtɪs.tɪ.kli/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Adverb
statistically
- In a statistical way.
- He made his point statistically.
- From a statistical point of view.
- Statistically, the study was almost worthless.
- From statistical evidence.
- Statistically, what he said is true.
- 2002, James F. Vail, Outrageous Fortune: What's Wrong with Hall of Fame Voting and How to Make It Statistically Sound, Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, →ISBN, page 143:
- Bench may be the greatest catcher subjectively, but he's not statistically. Statwise, Yogi Berra is the all-time backstop, regardless of which measure you prefer. Berra's Total-Z is one-third of a standard deviation higher than Bench's, and his Core-Z average is a point better.
- 2016 January 13, “USP2-45 Is a Circadian Clock Output Effector Regulating Calcium Absorption at the Post-Translational Level”, in PLOS ONE[1], :
- Data were tested for equiproportionality and Chi-square test associated p-value is reported when the difference is statistically significant.
Derived terms
Translations
in a statistical way
|