English, asked by karan3224, 1 year ago

This is to get a conclusion from the facts or context; to figure out what is being implied by reading between the lines?

Answers

Answered by margaretmary12
0

To get a conclusion from the facts or context; to figure out what is being implied by reading between the lines is to infer.

Few lines

- Infer in vocabulary is a verb which means to derive a result from a series of evidence by reading between the lines.

- It has its origin in the Latin word 'inferre' which means to ‘bring in, or bring about’

- Inference is the noun of the act of reading between lines and trying to understand something that we already know.

Hope this helps.

Answered by Arslankincsem
0

The act of figuring out what is being implied by reading between the lines, that is, to get to a conclusion from the facts or context provided is to infer it.  

Infer is a verb that refers to the act of deducing or concluding something from provided evidence and further reasoning rather than drawing out conclusion from explicit statements. The noun form is Inference.

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