Generalize in a sentence as a verb

This is where monads come in: you can generalize these functions over monads.

"Also it can help to generalize your solution.

As software engineers, we should not generalize about some of the decisions people have to make.

It seems like a fairly detailed description of your fairly niche needs that are hard to generalize in any real way.

It applies to him and it applies to me based on where we live, but it probably isn't something that one should generalize to the country.

Similar things in the world are stored with similar representations, so that the brain can generalize, and see commonalities.

I'd invite anyone who is prepared to generalize about street kid culture based on this one article alone to spend just one /evening/ walking around Haight and Stanyan.

I'll generalize and say that's the Arduino and below territory, the hobby embedded territory.

They allow one to easily generalize "interpreters" over sequences of commands.

Like most people, I generalize based on my own limited experience, and I have seen people grow up and learn how to use a computer in Gnome who were disgusted by Windows and OSX user interfaces.

It seems that they go a few directions:The most common seems to be to try and generalize, because relearning most of your job skills every few years starts to get annoying the 20th time you've had to do it.

Generalize definitions

verb

draw from specific cases for more general cases

See also: generalise extrapolate infer

verb

speak or write in generalities

See also: generalise

verb

cater to popular taste to make popular and present to the general public; bring into general or common use; "They popularized coffee in Washington State"; "Relativity Theory was vulgarized by these authors"

See also: popularize popularise vulgarize vulgarise generalise

verb

become systemic and spread throughout the body; "this kind of infection generalizes throughout the immune system"

See also: generalise