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Gallup
[ gal-uhp ]
noun
- George Horace, 1901–84, U.S. statistician.
- a city in W New Mexico.
Gallup
/ ˈɡæləp /
noun
- GallupGeorge Horace19011984MUSSCIENCE: statistician George Horace. 1901–84, US statistician: devised the Gallup Poll; founded the American Institute of Public Opinion (1935) and its British counterpart (1936)
Example Sentences
According to Gallup, on the eve of the election in 1996, just 39 percent said they were satisfied with how things were going in the country, but Bill Clinton won reelection in a rout.
A 2002 Gallup Poll found that 60% of the public said they trusted the government to “do what is right” about always or most of the time.
When Biden’s boosters were confronted with the polling from Gallup that most Americans felt negative weeks out from the election about the economy, their response was to point to aggregate data.
Public opinion polling by Gallup shows that trust in mass-media institutions is at a record low.
Abortion rights remain broadly popular - this Gallup poll in May suggested only one in 10 Americans thought it should be banned.
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