No, it is not. It can be a verb (to suggest or hypothesize) or a noun (a guess, or theory).
A phrase is a group of words based on a noun, a verb, or an adjective, but is not a complete sentence.The word 'conjecture' is both a noun and a verb.Example noun phrases:an unfounded conjecturea conjecture of fantasya well thought out conjectureExample verb phrases:to quickly conjectureto have to conjectureto conjecture with confidence
No, it is not. It can be a verb (to conjecture or deduce) or a noun with several uses. It is a noun adjunct in terms such as figure skating.
The term "adjecture" does not appear to be a standard word in English. It might be a typographical error or a blend of "adjective" and "conjecture." If you meant "adjective," it refers to a part of speech that describes or modifies a noun. If "conjecture" was intended, it refers to forming an opinion or theory without firm evidence. Please clarify if you meant something else!
The future tense of "conjecture" is "will conjecture."
a conjecture
The Poincaré Conjecture.
A conjecture should be testable. You test it and if it fails the test, it is a false conjecture.
The likely word is hypothesis, a suggestion or conjecture about observed scientific phenomena. Another possible word is the adjective hypotensive (having high blood pressure).
One possible conjecture is that their sum is 27. The conjecture is patently false, but that does not stop it being a conjecture.
My conjecture is that the sum is 67. A conjecture does not have to be true, or even plausible. You should be able to test it. If it is found to be true then in is no longer a conjecture, if it is found to be false, it is rejected - and so no longer a conjecture. If it cannot be proved either way, it remains a conjecture.
A conjecture is a guess, theory, hypothesis, or proposition.
The word "conjecture" is a noun. It refers to an opinion or conclusion based on incomplete information.