How to Use apportion in a Sentence

apportion

verb
  • The proceeds from the auction will be apportioned among the descendants.
  • The agency apportions water from the lake to residents.
  • Apportion the expenses between the parties involved.
  • In the current method to apportion to the states the 435 seats in the U.S. House, every state receives at least one seat.
    Jeffrey W Ladewig, The Conversation, 8 Aug. 2019
  • Blame might be apportioned elsewhere as well, but May must take the bulk of it.
    Noah Daponte-Smith, National Review, 31 July 2017
  • The state is on the cusp of losing a U.S. House seat and the census determines how seats are apportioned.
    Janet Adamy, WSJ, 13 Apr. 2018
  • Each school sets its own criteria for need and how the money is apportioned.
    Cheryl Winokur Munk, WSJ, 7 Dec. 2018
  • Under the panel's plan, the sum would be placed in the Wildlife Conservation Restoration Program and apportioned to the states.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 28 Dec. 2019
  • The new division gives more to the cities, to be apportioned based on population.
    John Sharp, AL.com, 5 Apr. 2018
  • If Lynch’s carries are apportioned wisely, the Raiders should be able to keep him reasonably fresh.
    Mark Purdy, The Mercury News, 26 Apr. 2017
  • The big question, still unanswered, is how Meta will apportion those layoffs.
    Byjacob Carpenter, Fortune, 9 Nov. 2022
  • But apportioning time and sticking to plans are valuable life skills kids can learn while school is canceled.
    Nir Eyal, New York Times, 12 Mar. 2020
  • These are the places where power in America gets apportioned.
    Adam Rogers, WIRED, 27 Aug. 2019
  • The app was intended to help the precinct chairs record the results from each round of voting and take care of the calculations to apportion delegates.
    Robert McMillan, WSJ, 5 Feb. 2020
  • The trustees of the joint fund will have to decide exactly how to apportion the money, as that formula is not set down in the tentative agreement.
    Gene Maddaus, Variety, 9 Nov. 2023
  • The data collected are used to apportion the number of seats each state has in the U.S. House of Representatives.
    David M. Zimmer, USA TODAY, 31 Mar. 2022
  • And that's how every place, every country in the world, all the time, that has some rhyme and reason to their health care decides how to apportion their health care: what to pay for, what to give people.
    Bonnie Kristian, The Week, 29 Sep. 2021
  • The precinct-level delegates who were apportioned on the night of the caucuses will go on to county conventions in March.
    Time, 2 Feb. 2020
  • Hard to know exactly how to apportion blame/credit here.
    Jon Wertheim, SI.com, 3 July 2018
  • In other words, direct taxes would have to be apportioned based on the population of each state.
    Matt Ford, The New Republic, 20 Sep. 2023
  • In Palm Beach Gardens, the flexibility meant that the city may be well within its right to apportion $2.1 million to a series of projects around a new set of links.
    Arkansas Online, 23 Jan. 2022
  • Still, while Clinton won the state, Obama took more delegates because of the way Nevada apportions them.
    Alexander Tin, CBS News, 23 Aug. 2019
  • Costs would be apportioned according to the size of an agency's water contract.
    Bettina Boxall, latimes.com, 25 Jan. 2018
  • Back inside the pilothouse, Richards and Silver were still huddled over the chart table, struggling to apportion the task between them.
    Annie Murphy Paul, Wired, 15 June 2021
  • Instead, the game offers a modest journal that walks you through each of the phases, apportioning slices of instruction in small bits.
    Charles Theel, Ars Technica, 28 Oct. 2017
  • Participants did apportion some blame to both drivers in these scenarios—but the human took more blame than the car.
    Cathleen O'Grady, Ars Technica, 31 Oct. 2019
  • So, why would they be upset about that is because the census numbers are used to apportion money, the $675 billion that goes out in federal funds to these cities.
    Fox News, 28 Mar. 2018
  • But what’s not so easy is to apportion credit for a discovery or invention.
    Martin Rees, Time, 27 Oct. 2022
  • At Blue Apron’s most automated plant in New Jersey, radishes tumble down chutes, go through a system of scales to sort them by weight and are apportioned at a rate of 70 bags a minute.
    Jennifer Smith, WSJ, 27 July 2018
  • The move put further strain on already tense relations between Russia and the West and opened a new legal front in the long-running process of apportioning blame for the missile strike.
    Rod McGuirk, Fox News, 28 Aug. 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'apportion.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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