presumed

listen to the pronunciation of presumed
English - Turkish
farzedilen
{f} farzet
farzedilmiş
presume
{f} farzetmek
presumed author
tahmin yazar
presumed acceptance
(Kanun) farzolunan kabul
presume
{f} 1. sanmak, zannetmek, tahmin etmek: I am presuming that it will cost around fifty million liras. Yaklaşık elli milyon liraya mal olacağını
presume
farzet
presume
addetmek
presume
haddini bilmemek
presume
cüret etmek
presume
varsayım
presume
kalkışmak
presume
yeltenmek
presume
kabul etmek
presume
sanmak
presume
kalkmak
presume
saymak
presume
zannetmek
presume
tahmin

Sami, Leyla'nın ülke dışında olduğunu tahmin ediyordu. - Sami presumed that Layla was out of the country.

Resmin Picasso tarafından yapıldığı tahmin edilmektedir. - The picture is presumed to have been painted by Picasso.

presume
varsaymak
presume
galiba
presume
presume on istismar etmek
presume
sanmak, zannetmek, tahmin etmek: I am presuming that it will cost around fifty million liras. Yaklaşık elli milyon liraya mal olacağını
presume
presu kalkış/çıkar/varsay
presume
{f} tahmin etmek
presume
presumablytahminen
presume
{f} haddini aşmak
presume
{f} ihtimal vermek
presume
cesaret etmek
English - English
Simple past tense and past participle of presume
appearing to be the most probable, often with some preparations starting to be made for it
presumed to be true in the absence of proof to the contrary; "the presumed reason for his anger"
{s} assumed, supposed, expected, conjectural
past of presume
presumed dead
considered to be dead (but with no concrete evidence)
presumed(a)
presumed to be true in the absence of proof to the contrary; "the presumed reason for his anger
conclusively presumed
Presumed by law to be true, and therefore providing no opportunity for evidence to the contrary to be presented

A child under seven years of age is conclusively presumed to be incapable of either murder or manslaughter (presumptio juris et de jure), no evidence of capacity being admissible.

presume
To suppose

That's the new coffee machine, I presume.

presume
To dare without permission

He presumed to hire a personal secretary.

presume
To give some evidence of

Paw prints in the snow presume a visit from next door's cat.

presume
To assume true without proof

You are presumed to be innocent until found guilty.

presume
{v} to suppose, venture, depend
he shall be presumed
he is bound to, he is obligated to
presume
take to be the case or to be true; accept without verification or proof; "I assume his train was late"
presume
If an idea, theory, or plan presumes certain facts, it regards them as true so that they can be used as a basis for further ideas and theories. The legal definition of `know' often presumes mental control The arrangement presumes that both lenders and borrowers are rational
presume
If you say that someone presumes to do something, you mean that they do it even though they have no right to do it. They're resentful that outsiders presume to meddle in their affairs
presume
take liberties or act with too much confidence
presume
To take liberties
presume
To venture, go, or act, by an assumption of leave or authority not granted; to go beyond what is warranted by the circumstances of the case; to venture beyond license; to take liberties; often with on or upon before the ground of confidence
presume
To give some evidence of proof
presume
To suppose or assume something to be, or to be true, on grounds deemed valid, though not amounting to proof; to believe by anticipation; to infer; as, we may presume too far
presume
take liberties or act with too much confidence constitute reasonable evidence for; "A restaurant bill presumes the consumption of food
presume
To dare to do something without permission
presume
to do or undertake without leave or authority previously obtained
presume
To assume or take beforehand; esp
presume
take upon oneself; act presumptuously, without permission; "How dare you call my lawyer?"
presume
To assume something is true in the absence of contrary proof
presume
constitute reasonable evidence for; "A restaurant bill presumes the consumption of food"
presume
If you presume that something is the case, you think that it is the case, although you are not certain. I presume you're here on business Dido's told you the whole sad story, I presume? `Had he been home all week?' --- `I presume so.' areas that have been presumed to be safe The missing person is presumed dead. = assume
presume
To take or suppose to be true, or entitled to belief, without examination or proof, or on the strength of probability; to take for granted; to infer; to suppose
presume
{f} assume, take for granted; dare, venture; take liberties, permit oneself
presumed

    Hyphenation

    pre·sumed

    Turkish pronunciation

    prizumd

    Pronunciation

    /prēˈzo͞omd/ /priːˈzuːmd/

    Etymology

    [ pri-'züm ] (verb.) 14th century. Middle English, from Late Latin and Middle French; Late Latin praesumere to dare, from Latin, to anticipate, assume, from prae- + sumere to take; Middle French presumer to assume, from Latin praesumere; more at CONSUME.
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