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The average of 10, 20 and 24 is (10 + 20 + 24)/3 = 18.
2013 June 1, “Towards the end of poverty”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8838, page 11:
But poverty’s scourge is fiercest below $1.25 (the average of the 15 poorest countries’ own poverty lines, measured in 2005 dollars and adjusted for differences in purchasing power): people below that level live lives that are poor, nasty, brutish and short.
(law, marine) Financial loss due to damage to transported goods; compensation for damage or loss.
2008, Filiberto Agusti, Beverley Earle, Richard Schaffer, Filiberto Agusti, Beverley Earle, International Business Law and Its Environment, page 219:
Historically, the courts have allowed a general average claim only where the loss occurred as a result of the ship being in immediate peril.[…]The court awarded the carrier the general average claim. It noted that “a ship′s master should not be discouraged from taking timely action to avert a disaster,” and need not be in actual peril to claim general average.
Customs duty or similar charge payable on transported goods.
Proportional or equitable distribution of financial expense.
(mathematics, statistics): The term average may refer to the statistical mean, median or mode of a batch, sample, or distribution, or sometimes any other measure of central tendency. Statisticians and responsible news sources are careful to use whichever of these specific terms is appropriate. In common usage, average refers to the arithmetic mean. It is, however, a common rhetorical trick to call the most favorable of mean, median and mode the "average" depending on the interpretation of a set of figures that the speaker or writer wants to promote.
2002, Andy Slaven, Video Game Bible, 1985-2002, page 228:
The graphics, sound, and most everything else are all very average. However, the main thing that brings this game down are the controls - they feel very clumsy and awkward at times.
2005, Brad Knight, Laci Peterson: The Whole Story: Laci, Scott, and Amber's Deadly Love Triangle, page 308:
But what the vast majority of the populace doesn′t realise is the fact that he′s only on TV because he became famous from one case, Winona Ryder's, which, by the way, he lost because he′s only a very average attorney.
2009, Carn Tiernan, On the Back of the Other Side, page 62:
In the piano stool there was a stack of music, mostly sentimental ballads intended to be sung by people with very average voices accompanied by not very competent pianists.
average (third-person singular simple presentaverages, present participleaveraging, simple past and past participleaveraged)
(transitive) To compute the average of, especially the arithmetic mean.
If you average 10, 20 and 24, you get 18.
(transitive) Over a period of time or across members of a population, to have or generate a mean value of.
The daily high temperature last month averaged 15°C.
I averaged 75% in my examinations this year.
1961 November, “Talking of Trains: The roller-bearing A1s”, in Trains Illustrated, page 643:
The five roller-bearing A1s are now averaging 120,000 miles between shopping; this figure is an improvement of about 50 per cent on the norm of other ex-L.N.E. Pacific types.
(transitive) To divide among a number, according to a given proportion.
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“average” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
Middle French
Etymology
The Französisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch derives the word from Old Frenchaver + -age, where aver means "cattle" and is cognate to English aver(“work-horse, working ox, or other beast of burden”).[1] The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (1993) compares it to Medieval Latinaveragium, from averia(“beast of burden”) (which the Französisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch in turn links to habeō(“to have”)).