be+deduced+or+deducible
91deduce — de|duce [dıˈdju:s US dıˈdu:s] v [T] formal [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: deducere to lead out , from ducere to lead ] to use the knowledge and information you have in order to understand something or form an opinion about it deduce that ▪… …
92deduce — verb (T) formal to make a judgment about something, based on the information that you have: deduce that: I deduced that she was married by the ring on her finger. (+ from): What did Darwin deduce from the presence of these species? deducible… …
93implicit — adj 1. absolute, perfect, complete, entire, whole, total; sheer, utter, unmitigated, unrestricted, unlimited; unqualified, categorical, unconditional, unconditioned, unreserved; positive, determinate, certain, veritable, unequivocal, unambiguous …
94implied — adj understood, unspoken, undeclared, tacit; implicit, inferred, inferential, deduced, deducible; signified, indicated, denoted, connoted; suggested, intimated, hinted at, insinuated, inferred, between the lines …
95deduce — /dəˈdjus / (say duh dyoohs) verb (t) (deduced, deducing) 1. to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer. 2. to trace the derivation of; trace the course of. {Latin dedūcere lead down, derive} –deducible, adjective …
96deduce — [dē do͞os′, dēdyo͞os′, dido͞os′, dē do͞os′] vt. deduced, deducing [ME deducen < L deducere, to lead down, bring away < de , down + ducere, to lead: see DUCT] 1. to trace the course or derivation of 2. to infer by logical reasoning; reason… …
97de|duc|i|ble — «dih DOO suh buhl, DYOO », adjective. that can be deduced or inferred: »The opinions of an expert are, where rational, deducible (Manchester Guardian Weekly) …
98AARON BEN ELIJAH — (1328?–1369), Karaite scholar, philosopher, and jurist. Aaron, who lived in Nicomedia (near present day Izmir, in Turkish Asia Minor), was called Aaron the Younger to distinguish him from Aaron ben Joseph, or Aaron the Elder, who lived a century… …