From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishguesstimateguess‧ti‧mate /ˈɡestəmət/ noun [countable] informal GUESSan attempt to judge a quantity by guessing it → estimate Could you give us a guesstimate of the numbers involved? —guesstimate /-tɪmeɪt/ verb [intransitive, transitive]
Examples from the Corpus
guesstimate• Are these limits evidence-based or guesstimates to pull reassuring wool over our eyes?• The problem with any such guesstimate is that, of course, we are basing our calculations on a statistical sample of one.From Longman Business Dictionaryguesstimateguess‧ti‧mate /ˈgestəmət/ noun [countable] informal an attempt to judge an amount or quantity by guessing itIn these uncertain economic times, Wall Street earnings estimates more closely resemble guesstimates. —guesstimate /-meɪt/ verb [intransitive, transitive]In the absence of usable pricing information, the best most lawyers can do is to guesstimate a fee before they start work.Origin guesstimate (1900-2000) guess + estimate