English-Thai Dictionary
deduce
VT ได้ ข้อสรุป คาดการณ์ คะเน จาก dai-kor-sa-rub
deduce from
PHRV สรุป จาก อนุมาน จาก ลงความเห็น จาก infer from sa-rub-jak
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DEDUCE
v.t.[L. To lead, bring or draw. ] 1. To draw from; to bring from.
O goddess, say, shall I deduce my rhymes
From the dire nation in its early times?
2. To draw from, in reasoning; to gather a truth, opinion or proposition from premises; to infer something from what precedes.
Reasoning is nothing but the faculty of deducing unknown truths from principles already known.
3. To deduct.
4. To transplant.
DEDUCED
pp. Drawn from; inferred; as a consequence from principles or premises.
DEDUCEMENT
n.The thing drawn from or deduced; inference; that which is collected from premises.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DEDUCE
De *duce ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Deduced; p. pr. & vb. n. Deducing. ]Etym: [L. deducere; de- + ducere to lead, draw. See Duke, and cf. Deduct. ]
1. To lead forth. [A Latinism ] He should hither deduce a colony. Selden.
2. To take away; to deduct; to subtract; as, to deduce a part from the whole. [Obs. ] B. Jonson.
3. To derive or draw; to derive by logical process; to obtain or arrive at as the result of reasoning; to gather, as a truth or opinion, from what precedes or from premises; to infer; -- with from or out of. O goddess, say, shall I deduce my rhymes From the dire nation in its early times Pope. Reasoning is nothing but the faculty of deducing unknown truths from principles already known. Locke. See what regard will be paid to the pedigree which deduces your descent from kings and conquerors. Sir W. Scott.
DEDUCEMENT
DEDUCEMENT De *duce "ment, n.
Defn: Inference; deduction; thing deduced. [R.] Dryden.
New American Oxford Dictionary
deduce
de duce |diˈd (y )o͞os dəˈd (j )us | ▶verb [ with obj. ] arrive at (a fact or a conclusion ) by reasoning; draw as a logical conclusion: little can be safely deduced from these figures | [ with clause ] : they deduced that the fish died because of water pollution. • archaic trace the course or derivation of: he cannot deduce his descent wholly by heirs male. DERIVATIVES de duc i ble |-səbəl |adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘lead or convey ’): from Latin deducere, from de- ‘down ’ + ducere ‘lead. ’
Oxford Dictionary
deduce
de ¦duce |dɪˈdjuːs | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 arrive at (a fact or a conclusion ) by reasoning; draw as a logical conclusion: little can be safely deduced from these figures | [ with clause ] : they deduced that the fish died because of water pollution. 2 archaic trace the course or derivation of: he cannot deduce his descent wholly by heirs male. DERIVATIVES deducible adjective ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘lead or convey ’): from Latin deducere, from de- ‘down ’ + ducere ‘lead ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
deduce
deduce verb we can deduce from the evidence that Harding was indeed present at the time of the murder: conclude, reason, work out, infer; glean, divine, intuit, understand, assume, presume, conjecture, surmise, reckon; informal figure out.
Oxford Thesaurus
deduce
deduce verb from the observation of fossils, he deduced that the whole Earth had once been covered by water: conclude, come to the conclusion, reason, work out, gather, infer, draw the inference; extrapolate, glean, divine, intuit, come to understand, understand, assume, presume, conjecture, surmise, reckon, dare say; N. Amer. figure; informal suss out.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
deduce
de duce /dɪd j úːs /動詞 他動詞 1 ⦅かたく ⦆〈人が 〉 «…から » …を推論 [推定, 演繹 (えんえき )]する, 〈結論 〉を出す «from » ; 〖~ that節 〗…であると推定する (↔induce ).2 ⦅古 ⦆〈由来 起源など 〉をたどる .de d ú c i ble 形容詞