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- INFER Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
In truth, the meanings of infer and imply have overlapped since the 16th century, making the need for a distinction a matter of preference
- INFERRED Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
INFERRED definition: derived by reasoning or concluded from evidence, or provisionally identified through either of these methods See examples of inferred used in a sentence
- Inferred - definition of inferred by The Free Dictionary
When we say that a speaker or sentence implies something, we mean that it is conveyed or suggested without being stated outright: When the mayor said that she would not rule out a business tax increase, she implied (not inferred) that some taxes might be raised
- INFERRED | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
Others are more "shallow" or largely inferred or interpolated (averages and assumptions), with limited informational content
- infer verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of infer verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary to reach an opinion or decide that something is true on the basis of information that is available synonym deduce infer something (from something) Much of the meaning must be inferred from the context Readers are left to infer the killer’s motives infer that…
- INFERRED definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
To infer means 'to deduce', and is used in the construction to infer something from something: I inferred from what she said that she had not been well To imply (sense 1) means 'to suggest, to insinuate' and is normally followed by a clause: are you implying that I was responsible for the mistake?
- Infer - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
When you infer, you listen closely to someone and guess at things they mean but haven't actually said It’s like guessing, but not making wild guesses You're making deductions — guesses based on logic
- infer - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
infer (third-person singular simple present infers, present participle inferring, simple past and past participle inferred) (transitive) To introduce (something) as a reasoned conclusion; to conclude by reasoning or deduction, as from premises or evidence [from 16th c ]
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