Yes, "infer" is a verb. It means to deduce or conclude information from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements. For example, when you gather clues from a story to understand a character's motivations, you are inferring their intentions.
Scientist should infer technology
The reader can infer from the article by looking at various elements.
The five sources of information that we use to make informed inferences are: 1. Using Knowledge to Infer 2. Using experience to Infer 3. Using clues to Infer 4. Using Critical Thinking to Infer: Internet 5. Using Figurative Language Cues to Infer.
you might infer that UV light has an influence on the pigment of the syrup
ckdv
The noun forms for the verb to infer are inference and the gerund, inferring.
The word inference is a noun. It is the act of inferring.
No, it is a verb. It means to conclude something, to assume some unstated meaning or fact from existing evidence, statements or explanations.
calculate deduce reckon evaluate infer (in the sense of figure out how something works rather than its value).
present tense - From his remarks I infer he doesn't like mepast tense - From his testimony the manager inferred the clerk was lying.Do not confuse imply and infer.We infer from something someone has said. But imply means to hint or suggest something.
* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce
infer means to guess
From the look on his face, I can infer that he is upset
Scientist should infer technology
What could infer about this type of discovery
From your defensive nature I was able to infer that I was right.
The reader can infer from the article by looking at various elements.