recalculate

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of recalculate After this lump-sum payment is applied, your lender recalculates your monthly payments based on the lower principal amount while keeping your interest rate and loan term unchanged. Mark Dennis, Forbes, 19 Mar. 2025 Therefore, the Education Department has a recertification process, a yearly requirement for borrowers enrolled in an IDR plan to update their information to recalculate their monthly payments. Shahar Ziv, Forbes, 4 Mar. 2025 However, all borrowers in IDR must periodically recertify their income to have their monthly payment recalculated. Adam S. Minsky, Forbes, 3 Mar. 2025 The reduction in future Social Security benefits caused by these excess deaths was then recalculated by NBER to $205 billion considering the consequent decrease in future payroll tax flows and higher payments to surviving spouses and children. Mark Joseph, Newsweek, 23 Feb. 2025 See All Example Sentences for recalculate
Recent Examples of Synonyms for recalculate
Verb
  • When a manager can reference a Word Picture mid-coaching session or use it to evaluate a candidate in an interview, that’s when values start driving performance.
    Mark Murphy, Forbes.com, 13 Apr. 2025
  • The Royals will re-evaluate India ahead of Sunday’s game.
    Jaylon Thompson, Kansas City Star, 13 Apr. 2025
Verb
  • Reducing the size of a fund also means recomputing management fees, and therefore handing money back to limited partners.
    BYJessica Mathews, Fortune, 31 July 2023
  • Clearing the entire browsing history will cause Chrome to recompute the FLoC ID.
    Zak Doffman, Forbes, 12 June 2021
Verb
  • States with the highest median refund for 2021 include Massachusetts at $936; Rhode Island at $946; Pennsylvania at $993; and New York, where the IRS estimated the median unclaimed refund is $995.
    Rachel Barber, USA Today, 14 Apr. 2025
  • For 2023 and 2024, the property owners owed $2 million in unpaid property taxes and the total debt attributed to the property’s value was estimated at 15.7%, according to the treasurer’s office.
    Samantha Moilanen, Chicago Tribune, 14 Apr. 2025
Verb
  • In December, 2021, the F.D.A. had lifted its requirement that mifepristone be prescribed in person; the number of virtual clinics, which assess a patient’s eligibility online or by phone, and mail out the medications, proliferated.
    Margaret Talbot, New Yorker, 14 Apr. 2025
  • For taxpayers who owe and do not pay by the due date, a separate failure-to-pay penalty of 0.5 percent per month is assessed.
    Thomas G. Moukawsher, MSNBC Newsweek, 14 Apr. 2025
Verb
  • However, the study also highlights that partner behavior still independently influences how interactions are appraised.
    Mark Travers, Forbes.com, 26 Mar. 2025
  • Excessive sales price to appraised value as well as cost/availability of homeowners insurance are a couple that come to mind outside of the normal income and debt ratio loan qualifiers.
    David Faris, Newsweek, 17 Mar. 2025
Verb
  • There’s an aluminum swingarm and KYB suspension calibrated for significant airtime, as well as the incredibly accurate Ducati Traction Control (DTC) – a first for the segment.
    New Atlas, New Atlas, 13 Apr. 2025
  • My take is that many people not only haven’t received the memo about what’s really going on but also haven’t calibrated the consequences of current events, which both are obvious and explicit.
    Clem Chambers, Forbes.com, 9 Apr. 2025
Verb
  • But Friday’s report on inflation at the wholesale level was backward looking, measuring March’s price levels.
    Stan Choe, Chicago Tribune, 11 Apr. 2025
  • That’s a major move for a market that typically measures things in hundredths of a percentage point.
    Stan Choe, Chicago Tribune, 11 Apr. 2025
Verb
  • Muldrow does what Black artists have always done uniquely well — signify upon, revise and refigure a theme, expanding an existing form through a clever new one.
    New York Times, New York Times, 11 Mar. 2021
  • That has affected local organizations including the Houston Choral Society who has been forced to refigure their presentation of music for the safety of both their performers and patrons.
    David Taylor, Houston Chronicle, 14 Aug. 2020

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Cite this Entry

“Recalculate.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/recalculate. Accessed 21 Apr. 2025.

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