Definition of summationnext

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of summation For an artist who has spent a lifetime collapsing the distance between art and life, this director’s cut is both summation and fresh invocation. Seth Abramovitch, HollywoodReporter, 27 Feb. 2026 The text of the article is a reasonable summation of her career, beginning with the present (Wifey is a smash, in its third printing, paperback rights sold for $350,000) and looking back at her beginnings (the NYU writing class, early rejection letters). Mark Oppenheimer, Vulture, 25 Feb. 2026 Dearing, in his final summation, said the Hobart City Council rushed their vote approving the data center ERA designation. Deborah Laverty, Chicago Tribune, 17 Feb. 2026 Playing a thinly disguised version of himself, Reynolds is, as Schneeberger and Neibaur point out, funny, exasperating, and moving, and Rifkin’s impeccable tailoring of the role to fit his star gives Reynolds a wonderful summation with which to end his career. Jim Hemphill, IndieWire, 10 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for summation
Recent Examples of Synonyms for summation
Noun
  • His leadership of Amazon’s cloud business has coincided with the AI boom and the remarkable scramble among cloud providers, including Microsoft, Google, and Oracle, to spend eye-popping sums building data centers and other AI infrastructure.
    Alexei Oreskovic, Fortune, 29 Apr. 2026
  • Paying upfront huge sums of money for an A-lister to do a show or movie at a streamer, that looks like success regardless of whether anybody showed up to actually watch it, but that doesn’t make sense in terms of how success has traditionally been understood.
    Nina Metz, Chicago Tribune, 29 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Mehdi Bostanchi owns a ventilation and air conditioning factory, and a second producing household fans, with a total of more than 1,130 employees.
    Amir-Hussein Radjy, Los Angeles Times, 28 Apr. 2026
  • As part of his plea agreements, Jones agreed to give up a total of $73,000 and, at sentencing, could be ordered to pay additional sums as restitution.
    Michael R. Sisak, Chicago Tribune, 28 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • The speed and totality with which this happened shocked everyone except Mother, who said with pride that this aggression was what being a man meant.
    Literary Hub, Literary Hub, 24 Apr. 2026
  • Paradoxically, his quest for totality entailed a diminishment—of size, of scale, of material.
    Ara H. Merjian, ARTnews.com, 16 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • The analysis of data from nine of the largest Connecticut cities showed that census tracts where the most tows occurred from 2022 to 2024 tended to have larger populations of renters, larger Black and Hispanic populations and much higher rates of poverty than the state as a whole.
    Ginny Monk, ProPublica, 27 Apr. 2026
  • Still, his season on the whole was underwhelming, finishing with just 28 points, his lowest since the 56-game 2020-21 season.
    Max Bultman, New York Times, 27 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Summation.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/summation. Accessed 2 May. 2026.

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