Use of inference in Sentences. 29 Examples
The examples include inference at the start of sentence, inference at the end of sentence and inference in the middle of sentence
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inference at the end of sentence
- This is a perfectly legitimate inductive inference.
- Subsequent evidence may confirm or deny that inference.
- First, variants on the Gettier theme can be written in which, though there is falsehood, there is no inference.
- Demanding but worthwhile effort to unify qualitative and quantitative research methods under one logic of inference.
- Classroom activities will tend to be those focusing attention on deciphering rather than on interpretation by indexical inference.
- Though selection of countries lies at the heart of comparison, selection without reflection may lead to serious problems of inference.
inference in the middle of sentence
- I submit that no inference is true.
- Is that a fair inference from his statement?
- If he is guilty then, by inference, so is his wife .
- The clear inference is that the universe is expanding.
- The inference I've drawn from his lateness is he overslept.
- One was clearly Xanthe's, the other by inference Sheridan's.
- Justification by inference is conditional justification only.
- From his manner, we drew the inference that he was satisfied.
- It had an extremely tiny head and, by inference, a tiny brain.
- He was portrayed as a hero and,by inference, Thompson as the villain.
- They were warned to expect a heavy air attack and by inference many casualties.
- You seemed to know about this book, and by inference I thought you had read it.
- The inference engine is generic, and it handles the logistics of a consultation.
- It is certainly the case that normal mode inference is computationally more tractable.
- The tenor of the above letter seems to endorse rather than diminish that inference - Ed.
- She'd begun spending a lot of money, and the obvious inference was that she'd stolen it.
- His change of mind was recent and sudden, the inference being that someone had persuaded him.
- The inference is therefore that the fish is either dead or cured by the time fungus gets around to colonising it.
- Once it is established what the defendant knew, then the inference to be drawn from these primary facts is objective.
- Would a reasonable occupier have drawn the inference that there was a danger and that the presence of the trespasser was likely.
- Therefore, if the assumption that the speaker is actually cooperating is to be preserved, some informative inference must be made.
- This inference is confirmed experimentally by observations in grid turbulence of changes in the spectrum with distance downstream.
- Le Corbusier's admonitions echo much of nineteenth century morality in terms of emphasis on order and health, and by inference cleanliness.