0 past simple and past participle of predict --
1 to say that an event or action will happen in the future, especially as a result of knowledge or experience: --
[ + question word ] No one can predict when the disease will strike again.
[ + to infinitive ] The hurricane is predicted to reach the coast tomorrow morning.
[ + that ] Who could have predicted that within ten years he'd be in charge of the whole company?
It's still not possible to accurately predict the occurrence of earthquakes.
It is possible that such differences could alter the risk of death predicted by our model.
Presence of dementia was predicted by older age at baseline.
In all cases the mouse performed most poorly, as predicted by our theory of selection overhead.
We also predicted wing development of flies should correlate inversely with roost duration, restricting flightless forms to bats in permanent roosts.
Table 2 presents the variables and their predicted effects.
There should be some plausible linguistic or extralinguistic explanation for the mismatch between the predicted and attested types.
He had predicted at baseline that he would experience verbal hallucinations as part of the amphetamine experience.
Convective instability of a ferromagnetic fluid is predicted for a fluid layer heated from below in the presence of a uniform vertical magnetic field.