Home | Post your own GRE Word | Admission & Visa Counselling | Forum | Word Game | GRE Coaching | Contact Us
GRE coaching :
SPECIAL "GRE 1400+" batches are going to be started from This Sunday at Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, Noida and New Delhi centers. Want to join ? Click here now !          Special batches from This Sunday for Memorising Barrons 3500 GRE words in 35 classes, Only at Achievers Point, Where else ? Call Now on GRE Helpline: 09899004123
Correspondence Course | Antonym | Analogy | Reading Comprehension | Sentence Completion | Online Tutoring

September 18th, 2009

You are currently browsing the articles from GRE Word of The Day from GREword.com written on September 18th, 2009.

Infer or imply?

Infer or imply?

It depends on who’s talking.
To infer means to deduce something or figure it out.� It’s often confused with the word imply, since both words refer to something that is not stated directly. Infer refers to information that is going into someone’s head.

Imply refers to information that is coming (or not coming) from someone’s mouth. The person doing the talking is implying; the person listening is inferring.
Let the “f” in infer stand for “figure out.”

Google Buzz

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on September 18th, 2009 with 2 comments.
Read more articles on GRE Word of the Day.



The best study material for scoring 1400 in GRE.

GRE Question of the Day  TestFever  LiveErator  SOP Editing  

GRE Word of the Day

Receive GRE word of the Day directly to your inbox everyday. Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Connect Now