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Definition of projection noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

projection

noun
 
/prəˈdʒekʃn/
 
/prəˈdʒekʃn/
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    estimate

  1. [countable] an estimate or a statement of what figures, amounts, or events will be in the future, or what they were in the past, based on what is happening now
    • to make forward/backward projections of population figures
    • Sales have exceeded our projections.
    • Calculations are based on a projection of existing trends.
    Extra Examples
    • We have been making forward projections as to future profitability of the firm.
    • On current projections, there will be more than 13 million people over 65 iin the UK by 2030.
    • The council has revised its projections of funding requirements upwards.
    • They presented profit projections for the rest of the year.
    Topics Businessc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • current
    • latest
    • initial
    verb + projection
    • make
    • revise
    • exceed
    phrases
    • base a projection on something
    preposition
    • on… projections
    • projection about
    • projection for
    See full entry
  2. of image

  3. [uncountable, countable] the act of putting an image of something onto a surface; an image that is shown in this way
    • the projection of three-dimensional images on a computer screen
    • laser projections
  4. of solid shape

  5. [countable] (specialist) a solid shape or object as represented on a flat surface
    • map projections
  6. something that sticks out

  7. [countable] something that sticks out from a surface
    • tiny projections on the cell
  8. of voice/sound

  9. [uncountable] the act of making your voice, a sound, etc. audible (= able to be heard) at a distance
    • voice projection
  10. psychology

  11. [uncountable] the act of imagining that somebody else is thinking the same as you and is reacting in the same way
  12. of thoughts/feelings

  13. [countable, uncountable] the act of giving a form and structure to inner thoughts and feelings
    • The idea of God is a projection of humans' need to have something greater than themselves.
  14. Word Originmid 16th cent. (in sense (3)): from Latin projectio(n-), from proicere ‘throw forth’, from pro- ‘forth’ + jacere ‘to throw’.
See projection in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee projection in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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