I understood the plot of the story.
I understood the instructions clearly and completed the task accordingly.
There is an epidemic of flu spreading across the country.
I needed to decode the message to understand what it said.
The context of the sentence, the surrounding words, and the grammatical structure of the sentence can all influence the meaning of a word. In addition, the tone, emphasis, and punctuation in a sentence can also affect how a word is understood.
You can use "but" in a sentence with the word "infer" to contrast ideas or outcomes. For example, "He didn't directly state his opinion, but I inferred that he disagreed based on his tone of voice." This shows a difference between what was said and what was understood.
This is not an English phrase. Perhaps you mean the word drop, although you don't "drop up" in English either. If I understood exactly what you were trying to spell, I could give you a good sentence.
I would be more apt to use it if I understood how it is used.
There is an epidemic of flu spreading across the country.
After an initial bid of $10 the bidding rose to $25.
I needed to decode the message to understand what it said.
You don't seem to get what I thought was understood.
(able to be understood) "The translations on the Rosetta Stone made Egyptian hieroglyphics comprehensible."
When the answer was repeated, she understood it better.
Yes. Use it or lose it. The "you" is understood.
Ambiguous
The information is readily available on our website. The combination of chemical elements into molecules is readily understood by most students.
to misconstrue a sentence is take it the wrong way because you have not fully understood it
No, "you" is not the only understood noun. In many cases, the noun can be inferred from the context of the conversation or sentence structure. For example, in commands like "Go!" and questions like "Want some?", the implied noun could be "you" or "someone".