From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtabulatetab‧u‧late /ˈtæbjəleɪt/ verb [transitive] LISTto arrange figures or information together in a set or a list, so that they can be easily compared —tabulation /ˌtæbjəˈleɪʃən/ noun [countable, uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
tabulate• The results, tabulated by computer, were predictable.• They promised results within four or five minutes of when they were tabulated by the state.• The values tabulated here give us a measure of comparison for Kaimann's experimental results.• By Saturday night, the ballots are tabulated, the discussions complete.• There are many examples taken from the original literature and corresponding tabulated values.• The league tabulated votes on 12 key environmental issues in the House and 14 in the Senate.From Longman Business Dictionarytabulatetab‧u‧late /ˈtæbjəleɪt/ verb [transitive] to arrange sets of figures or information in a list so they can be easily comparedThe trade association tabulates the monthly figures. —tabulation noun [countable, uncountable]the tabulation of overhead expensestabulations of per capita income→ See Verb tableOrigin tabulate (1500-1600) Late Latin past participle of tabulare, from Latin tabula; → TABLE1