Ballpark in a sentence as a noun

" I'd ballpark that in the hundreds to low thousand range.

CT scans are in the ballpark of several months working as a flight-attendant.

I would love for them to switch to a linear system so that I could produce a ballpark estimate of where I am in the queue.

To think the two are even in the same zip code, much less the same ballpark, is just, well it reflects a rather isolated viewpoint, put it that way. Yahoo is a $19B corporation.

Linus's annual earnings are in the region of $10m, his net worth is ballpark $150m, and we're meant to be surprised he hasn't collected $136 in Github tips?

It's getting teaching in the same ballpark of prestige as consulting, banking, law school, medical school, etc for students coming out of top colleges.

This talk barely gets in the ballpark of quality of some of the presentations -- and the real reason to go isn't the presentations, but to meet people who doing great things in software.

The distinct sound of the triangle constitutes of a high fundamental frequency, ballpark 5kHz and of many very high-pitch harmonics.

In fact, the company has very high customer satisfaction ratings, including an NPS that is in the ballpark of Amazon, and a very high customer retention rate.

That's only 30 years away, and probably not a bad ballpark estimate for how long it'll take to get this technology to the point where you can start really relying on it for offensive capability.

I didn't do any testing -- it was an experimental campaign and totally flamed out. If it had been anywhere in the general ballpark of feasible, I would happily have started iterating, but $35 CPA to the free trial of a thirty dollar product did not strike me as something which was amenable to iterate-quickly-to-victory.

Ballpark definitions

noun

a facility in which ball games are played (especially baseball games); "take me out to the ballpark"

See also: park

noun

near to the scope or range of something; "his answer wasn't even in the right ballpark"