Which preposition to use with estimating

of Occurrences 1002%

Small things may be pecked at, trifles may be made mountains of by the disgruntled, but where does he get a clear-sighted, whole-hearted estimate of himself and his work?

at Occurrences 294%

The number of glaciers in the Alps, according to the Schlagintweit brothers, is 1100, of which 100 may be regarded as primary, and the total area of ice, snow, and névé is estimated at 1177 square miles, or an average for each glacier of little more than one square mile.

for Occurrences 86%

for contingencies to his estimate for cost of materials and rates of labour, and doubling the total to cover interest on loans and subsequent development, he arrives at £29,105,020 (Turkish)[60] as the cost, from first to last, of irrigation and agricultural works together; and he estimates that the 1,410,000 hectares reclaimed by this outlay will produce crops to the value of £9,070,000 (Turkish) a year.

in Occurrences 59%

How far they went cannot be estimated in words, for distance matters little in that place; but at the end they came to a path which sloped a little downwards to the edge of a delightful moorland country, all brilliant with the hues of the mountain flowers.

from Occurrences 33%

The produce of the customs was the last year less by half a million than the mean revenue; and as our customs must always bear a certain proportion to trade, we may form an indisputable estimate from them of its increase or its decline.

as Occurrences 31%

The significance of this stanzaperhaps a rather obscure onerequires to be estimated as a whole.

on Occurrences 20%

Well, sir, Butts went over and began to gas about outfittin', and McQuestion answers and figures up the estimates on the counter, and, by Gawd!

with Occurrences 14%

This somewhat enigmatic personage can not as yet be estimated with any impartiality.

by Occurrences 13%

His height I judged roughly to be five feet eight inches, but my measurements would furnish data for a more exact estimate by Thorndyke.

to Occurrences 9%

He only permitted mass to be said with a low voice in the churches, till those losses and damages could be estimated to the satisfaction of the parties.

for Occurrences 7%

NOTE.In estimating for the plant necessary for treating the whole of the Salford sewage, a margin was allowed on above figures.

under Occurrences 3%

" It is difficult to make estimates under such circumstances, but there can hardly have been less than 5,000 to 10,000 persons upon the promenade that evening.

before Occurrences 3%

I was exposed to two dangers; perhaps to three: but to none which I had not fully estimated before even preparing for my voyage.

within Occurrences 3%

He will estimate within bounds at four hundred dollars each.

than Occurrences 2%

There are few books more difficult to estimate than those in which M. Huysman sets forth the story of a conversion generally supposed to bear no very distant resemblance to his own.

among Occurrences 2%

It is estimated among dealers in precious stones that since Mr. Moffatt began to buy the price of pearls has gone up over fifty per cent.'

after Occurrences 1%

Ennius lays stress on the circumstance that the Romans were reckoned Greeks: -Contendunt Graecos, Graios memorare solent sos.- The poetical value of the greatly celebrated Annals may easily be estimated after the remarks which we have already made regarding the excellences and defects of the poet in general.

between Occurrences 1%

There is no condition which is not disquieted either with the care of gaining or of keeping money; and the race of man may be divided in a political estimate between those who are practising fraud, and those who are repelling it.

above Occurrences 1%

When a ship is estimated above its real value, how will the commander suffer by a wreck, or what shall restrain him from destroying his vessel, when it may be done with security to himself, except that integrity, which, indeed, ought to be generally diffused, but which is not always to be found, and to which few men think it safe to trust upon occasions of far less importance.

like Occurrences 1%

The laws hardly recognized his claim to be considered a moral agent,he was secundum hominum genus; he could acquire no rights, social or political,he was incapable of inheriting property, or making a will, or contracting a legal marriage; his value was estimated like that of a brute; he was a thing and not a person, "a piece of furniture possessed of life;" he was his master's property, to be scourged, or tortured, or crucified.

below Occurrences 1%

The number of killed could never be precisely ascertained; but it was never estimated below six hundred, and was commonly believed to have greatly exceeded that number, as many of the victims were of the poorer classmany, too, the bread-winners of their families.

over Occurrences 1%

Much criticism has resulted because of the excess of the present estimates over those originally proposed, arising largely from a failure to analyze the two estimates or to appreciate fully the actual conditions.

up Occurrences 1%

Cotton goods through Spanish ports, 34,637 Through Gibraltar, 608,581 Through Portugal, 540,000 Through Leghorn, Genoa, &c. &c. 500,000 Total, L.3,014,826 An extravagant writer, of the name of Pebrer, carried the estimate up to £5,850,000.

Which preposition to use with  estimating