Tabulation \Tab`u*la"tion\, n. The act of forming into a table or tables; as, the tabulation of statistics.
An Associated Press tabulation showed Bush leading for 356 electoral votes, although he could not yet count securely on the 270 needed for victory.
The precinct returns were to be kept separate from the county-level tabulation in the AP election computer, but they were not.
Fortunately, Hollerith's punched-card tabulation system, developed for the 1890 census, saved the day.
Payments have nearly tripled in the Senate and increased almost fivefold in the House since 1980, reaching a combined total that exceeded $7.7 million last year, a record, according to a Wall Street Journal tabulation.
Aycock said that as of Nov. 30 _ the most recent tabulation _ about $796 million had been written down, an average of $172,857 on 4,608 loans.
Dukakis and Jackson are running one-two in the Democratic delegate race, according to The Associated Press tabulation.
This tabulation of tax bite by age suggests that as the baby boom moves into middle age, not only will their income increase but so will their tax burden.
The programs, tied for 16th place overall, ranked 23rd and 26th respectively among non-black households, according to the study, which is based on a special tabulation of Nielsen ratings.
Craig Fuller, the executive director of the state Democratic Party, said the official tabulation had been slowed by mistakes found in some community caucuses.
The study's tabulation of Brazil's long-term bank debt also includes a $5.2 billion loan now being gathered, meaning that bankers think a gross reduction of about $24 billion overall is possible by the end of 1993.
These will include word processors, transistors, certain laser devices, advanced tabulation machines and frequency analyzers, he said.
A single person who marries, moves and the next year files a joint return, is also lost in this tabulation.