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inferir

to infer

verb een-feh-REER Rare

Origin: From Latin inferre, 'to bring in, to conclude'.

Also means

to deduce

Usage Note

Inferir means to reach a conclusion from evidence or reasoning. It is slightly more formal than deducir and belongs to the same register as academic and legal writing. Crucially, inferir is also a false friend trap: it does NOT mean 'to infer wrongly' — that would require additional context. In Spanish-speaking legal contexts inferir una herida means to inflict a wound, an entirely separate meaning preserved from the Latin sense 'to bring upon'.

Examples

"Puedo inferir su respuesta por su silencio."

Natural Translation

I can infer his answer from his silence.

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