- inferrer
- noun see infer
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
inferrer — See inferable. * * * … Universalium
inferrer — in·fer·rer … English syllables
inferrer — ə̇nˈfər.ə(r) also ˈfə̄rə(r noun ( s) : one that infers … Useful english dictionary
infer — verb (inferred; inferring) Etymology: Middle French or Latin; Middle French inferer, from Latin inferre, literally, to carry or bring into, from in + ferre to carry more at bear Date: 1528 transitive verb 1. to derive as a conclusion from facts… … New Collegiate Dictionary
infer — inferable, inferible, inferrible, adj. inferably, adv. inferrer, n. /in ferr /, v., inferred, inferring. v.t. 1. to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence: They inferred his displeasure from his cool tone of voice. 2.… … Universalium
Mirah (programming language) — Mirah Paradigm(s) object oriented, imperative Appeared in 2008 Typing discipline static, with dynamic features, strong, inferred Influenced by Ruby, Java, Boo … Wikipedia
infer — verb is it really possible to infer that a crime was committed, given this flimsy evidence? Syn: deduce, conclude, conjecture, surmise, reason, interpret; gather, understand, presume, assume, take it, extrapolate; read between the lines, figure… … Thesaurus of popular words
infer — [in fʉr′] vt. inferred, inferring [L inferre, to bring or carry in, infer < in , in + ferre, to carry, BEAR1] 1. Obs. to bring on or about; cause; induce 2. to conclude or decide from something known or assumed; derive by reasoning; draw as a… … English World dictionary