SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: NOUN
- Plural form of suspect.
- Someone who is under suspicion
- A person or institution against whom an action is brought in a court of law; the person being sued or accused
- A message expressing an opinion based on incomplete evidence
- An idea or opinion based on insufficiently conclusive evidence; a conjecture.
- The thought that something may be, of which, however, there is no certain or strong evidence; speculation; conjecture.
- Thought; reflection.
- Synonyms See surmise, verb, and inference.
- In old English law, a suggestion. See suggestion, 5.
- In ecclesiastical law, an allegation in a libel.
- A thought, imagination, or conjecture, which is based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess.
- Reflection; thought.
- Thought, imagination, or conjecture, which may be based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess; as, surmises of jealousy or of envy.
- Reflection; thought; posit.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: VERB
- Regard as untrustworthy; regard with suspicion; have no faith or confidence in
- Imagine to be the case or true or probable
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of suspect.
- Hold in suspicion; believe to be guilty
- Infer from incomplete evidence
- Imagine to be the case or true or probable
- To conjecture, to opine or to posit with contestable premises.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To make a judgment about (something) without sufficient evidence; guess.
- To say (something) as a guess or conjecture.
- To make a guess or conjecture.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To imagine without certain knowledge; to infer on slight grounds; to suppose, conjecture, or suspect; to guess.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Synonyms Imagine, Guess, etc. (see conjecture); fancy, apprehend, mistrust.
- To infer or guess upon slight evidence; conjecture; suspect.
- In old English law, to suggest; allege.
- To accuse; make a charge against; also, to bring forward as an accusation.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: RELATED WORDS
- Defendants, Culprits, Robbers, Queer, Shady, Mistrust, Distrust, Funny, Doubt, Questionable, Fishy, Surmise, Accused, Defendant, Suspicious
- Hypothesize, Postulate, Posit, Deduce, Suppose, Assume, Suggest, Infer, Presume, Suspect, Speculation, Hypothesis, Conjecture, Guess, Supposition
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Men, Convicts, Defendants, Culprits, Robbers, Queer, Shady, Mistrust, Funny, Doubt, Questionable, Fishy, Accused, Defendant, Suspicious
- Speculate, Believe, Postulate, Posit, Deduce, Suppose, Suggest, Infer, Presume, Suspect, Speculation, Hypothesis, Conjecture, Guess, Supposition
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Police were occasionally accused of beating suspects to obtain confessions, and suspects often recanted their confessions during their trial.
- Suspects: All pertinent information pertaining to the suspects involved in the operationincluding their name, date of birth, physical description, identifying numbers, criminalhistory and photographs.
- Considerations: Virtually no research has explored the use of known interrogation techniques with juvenile suspects, a legally and developmentally unique class of suspects.
- These include, inter alia, constitutional guaranteed interrogation of suspects and hearings regarding extensions of custody of suspects.
- When the suspects saw Groover they ran and one of the suspects shot at his car with a handgun.
- Document a description of the suspects: Include how many suspects were present, sex, race, hair coloring, clothing, voice, or other unusual characteristics.
- Bartel also says Perverted Justice volunteers would plead with suspects to meet them in person, even after the suspects initially declined.
- Arrested for same crime, in newspaper white suspects get yearbook photos, black suspects get mugshots.
- Interview informants, suspects and witnesses to ascertain alibis, clues, time frames and possible suspects.
- There have been video game simulation studies demonstrating that police more quickly shoot black suspects than white suspects.
- They briefly surmise the superior qualities of such premium fonts.
- The ramifications for future presidents are not difficult to surmise.
- Hypothetical needs, surmise, and suspicion should be afforded no weight.
- How much he saw of her, we can only surmise.
- Diminutive ardour team toxicological surmise corrigenda consumption violent outlast.
- Ifnot disproved, one may surmise that it is true.
- Under torture, this time of wild surmise and alarm.
- Within a few minutes his surmise was endorsed.
- Now one could surmise different things about this.
- But all that is surmise, but surmise that could be answered by examination of aerial or satellite photos.
SUSPECTS vs SURMISE: QUESTIONS
- Should Malaysia extradite Malaysian murder suspects to Australia?
- Did Arbery murder suspects send racially charged texts?
- How many suspects were seen fleeing Arcola shooting?
- Can you help Euclid Police identify other suspects?
- What protection is available for suspects in custody?
- Should suspects in criminal cases be publicly named?
- Who are the Berkeley County drug trafficking suspects?
- Should police officers lie to suspects in interviews?
- Is Iran detaining suspects over Ukraine plane downing?
- Does the Constitution protect suspects from torture?
- What can a reader of Chinese lacking knowledge of kana surmise about Japanese?
- What did Mariam surmise about Nana in a Thousand Splendid Suns?