Mean is the average.
I didn't mean what I said. What does antidisestablishmentarianism mean? My sister is mean. I don't like being mean. The mean of a set of values is the average. The mean temperature is much lower in the valley in spring.
The population mean is the mean value of the entire population. Contrast this with sample mean, which is the mean value of a sample of the population.
If repeated samples are taken from a population, then they will not have the same mean each time. The mean itself will have some distribution. This will have the same mean as the population mean and the standard deviation of this statistic is the standard deviation of the mean.
The mean is the average
The girl was upbraided for the verbosity of her sentences.
Bellicosity, verbosity, atrocity,
using or containing more words than are necessary. syn: long-winded
Uses to many words, can be come long winded, tedious or boring
Verbosity
Loquacious means talkative or chatty, often characterized by excessive verbosity or long-windedness in conversation.
The opposite of brev is verbosity, which refers to using more words than necessary or being overly wordy in communication.
This quote suggests that true wisdom can be conveyed succinctly and effectively without the need for lengthy explanations. It implies that the value of a message lies in its clarity and brevity, rather than its complexity or verbosity.
Verbiage refers to an excessive or unnecessary use of words, often resulting in verbosity or wordiness. It can also imply language that is overly complex or convoluted.
The spelling for the bones of the back is vertebrae(singular is vertebra).
The term for using unnecessary words is "verbosity." It refers to the excessive and often redundant use of words in speech or writing, which can make communication less clear and concise.
The suffix is -ty. "Animus" is the original Latin root, meaning "spirit" and the -ty is the suffix (which creates a noun denoting a condition) -- thus the new word, "animosity." It is similar to the words bellicosity (from "bellus") and verbosity (from "verbum").