If you need any word definitions, go to dictionary.refrence.com. it tis a great website for that kinda stuff.
The correct spelling is surmised. It is the past tense of the verb surmise.
The opposite of assume (to take on) would be to decline or refuse. The opposite of assume (have unsupported belief, or assumption) could be "presume" because presume implies that there is reason to believe something.
(The noun "conjecture" refers to an opinion or idea that is not based on definite knowledge and is likely guessing. The verb means to state such an opinion)(noun)Conjectures about the newcomer were many and varied.His conjecture about the cause of the accident was unfounded.The editorial about the new park was more conjecture than fact.(verb)When news anchors finish giving the facts of a story, many feel compelled to conjecture what the story means.Many individuals conjecture about the possible forms of life in other planets.Conjecture refers to a statement that is not proven or one that you are going to prove. A conjecture in a sentence may refer to a math problem that you plan to solve or how you think a situation might end. You have discussed various conjectures for the how the events this evening will turn out.His theory of the crime is based solely on conjecture without any hard evidence.
conclude, decide; consider, believe, think, deem, view; deduce, gather, infer, gauge, estimate, guess, surmise, conjecture
surmisedpast participle, past tense of sur·miseVerb: Suppose that something is true without having evidence to confirm it: "he surmised that something must be wrong"
You can surmise when she's angry by her animated gestures.
Your teachers may surmise that you wrote this sentence but they would be wrong.
Through careful examination of the scene, the detectives were able to surmise that the death was accidental.
Guess.
it means to prove something true with out evidence. "After hearing her speak on the subject, I surmise, she's very well educated.
A synonym is attempt and an antonym
Without a photo of the can, one can only surmise that the pineapple was packed, or canned, on 8/13/09.
I can only surmise that you mean A-un. This is the Japanese syllable for "aum" or it sounds like "om". It is supposed to signify the beginning and ending for all things.
Distrust, qualm, supposition, surmise, conjecture
concludesurmisedecideconcludesurmisedecideconcludesurmisedecideconcludesurmisedecide
The term aqua is Italian for water, agua is the spanish term for water, and Verde means green in spanish, so I surmise that it means green water
Context is key: Inflection and tone are difficult to surmise from the written word, so perhaps the verse(s) in question would best be listed for a proper answer.