| surmise | infer, conjecture, guess, presume | en | (fiil) | en |
| surmise | guess, supposition, assumption | en | (isim) | en |
| surmise | To imagine without certain knowledge; to infer on slight grounds; to suppose, conjecture, or suspect; to guess | en | en |
| surmise | Reflection; thought | en | en |
| surmise | A thought, imagination, or conjecture, which is based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess; as, the surmisses of jealousy or of envy | en | en |
| surmise | If you surmise that something is true, you guess it from the available evidence, although you do not know for certain. There's so little to go on, we can only surmise what happened He surmised that he had discovered one of the illegal streets | en | en |
| surmise | If you say that a particular conclusion is surmise, you mean that it is a guess based on the available evidence and you do not know for certain that it is true. It is mere surmise that Bosch had Brant's poem in mind when doing this painting His surmise proved correct. = conjecture. to guess that something is true, using the information you know already surmise that (past participle of surmetre , from supermettere , from mittere ) | en | en |
| surmise | a message expressing an opinion based on incomplete evidence | en | en |
| surmise | infer from incomplete evidence | en | en |
| surmise | imagine to be the case or true or probable; "I suspect he is a fugitive"; "I surmised that the butler did it" | en | en |