View example sentences and word forms for Infers.

Infers

Infers | Infer

Infers meaning

third-person singular simple present indicative of infer

Example sentences (14)

The Alphaverse, as its name infers, is at the top of the multiversal chain because it was the first to discover the multiverse existed.

Further, cargo pants convey a rough and tough style, trousers deliver a more tailored look, while skirts and shorts map an experimental effort hinging on personal styles,” infers Mewawalla.

Prescription: Ice Cream infers his philosophical views about medical care, but also the significant lesson of life’s small pleasures; playing with friends (sic), spending time with family, and enjoying nature.

In the first phase of WAH, which the researchers call the Watch stage, an AI agent observes a humanlike agent perform a task and infers a goal from their actions.

Mechanisms for holding Israel to account for rights violations, including the Leahy Law, which McCollum’s bill infers.

The ad accuses China of hoarding supplies and infers that Mr Biden is somehow to blame.

To be a global traveler automatically infers a high social standing.

Before 1900, Peirce treated abduction as the use of a known rule to explain an observation, e.g., it is a known rule that if it rains the grass is wet; so, to explain the fact that the grass is wet; one infers that it has rained.

He spots the verses of the Prize Song, written in Sachs's handwriting, and infers that Sachs is secretly planning to enter the contest for Eva's hand.

In the course of the conversation, Fitzgibbon infers the bishop’s intention to put O’Malley in charge of the parish.

The King infers that Carlos and Elisabeth have been lovers and demands that they both be immediately killed in a double sacrifice.

This infers different isotypes of antibodies have different class effects due to their different Fc regions binding and activating different types of receptors.

Unaware of this relationship, Eboli infers that she, Eboli, is the one Don Carlos loves.

We know that Aristotle described it as "another Earth", from which Greek scholar George Burch infers that it must be similar in size, shape and constitution to Earth.