TOP

Definition of surmise verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

surmise

verb
 
/səˈmaɪz/
 
/sərˈmaɪz/
(formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they surmise
 
/səˈmaɪz/
 
/sərˈmaɪz/
he / she / it surmises
 
/səˈmaɪzɪz/
 
/sərˈmaɪzɪz/
past simple surmised
 
/səˈmaɪzd/
 
/sərˈmaɪzd/
past participle surmised
 
/səˈmaɪzd/
 
/sərˈmaɪzd/
-ing form surmising
 
/səˈmaɪzɪŋ/
 
/sərˈmaɪzɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. to guess or suppose something using the evidence you have, without definitely knowing synonym conjecture
    • surmise (that)… From the looks on their faces, I surmised that they had had an argument.
    • surmise what, where, etc… It is difficult to surmise where she might have been staying.
    • surmise something I can only surmise his reasons for acting as he did.
    • + speech ‘They must have been here first,’ Julie surmised.
    Extra Examples
    • Both men rightly surmised that he had left the building.
    • What he had done with the money can only be surmised.
    Topics Doubt, guessing and certaintyc2
    Word Originlate Middle English (in the senses ‘formal allegation’ and ‘allege formally’): from Anglo-Norman French and Old French surmise, feminine past participle of surmettre ‘accuse’, from late Latin supermittere ‘put in afterwards’, from super- ‘over’ + mittere ‘send’.
See surmise in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

Other results

All matches
trait
noun
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 5000
B2
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day