释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024sus•pect /v. səˈspɛkt; n. ˈsʌspɛkt; adj. ˈsʌspɛkt, səˈspɛkt/USA pronunciation v. - to believe (something) to be the case;
surmise: [~ + (that) clause]I suspected (that) he might have left already, and I was right.[~ + object]I only suspected it; I wasn't positive. - to believe to be guilty, with little or no proof:[~ + object (+ of + object)]to suspect a person of murder.
- to doubt or mistrust:[~ + object]I suspect his motives.
n. [countable] - one who is suspected, esp. of a crime.
adj. - open to or under suspicion;
not certain:He offered some suspect arguments and I knew they were wrong, but I couldn't quite pin down why.
See -spec-. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024sus•pect (v. sə spekt′;n. sus′pekt; adj. sus′pekt, sə spekt′),USA pronunciation v.t. - to believe to be guilty, false, counterfeit, undesirable, defective, bad, etc., with little or no proof:to suspect a person of murder.
- to doubt or mistrust:I suspect his motives.
- to believe to be the case or to be likely or probable;
surmise:I suspect his knowledge did not amount to much. - to have some hint or foreknowledge of:I think she suspected the surprise.
v.i. - to believe something, esp. something evil or wrong, to be the case;
have suspicion. n. - a person who is suspected, esp. one suspected of a crime, offense, or the like.
adj. - suspected;
open to or under suspicion.
- Latin suspectāre, equivalent. to su- su- + spectāre, frequentative of specere to look at
- Middle English (adjective, adjectival) 1250–1300
sus•pect′i•ble, adj. - 3.See corresponding entry in Unabridged guess, conjecture, suppose.
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