Associations to the word «Suggested»
Noun
- Archaeologist
- Deletion
- Bias
- Theory
- Primate
- Impairment
- Deficit
- Cholesterol
- Outcome
- Inconsistency
- Adulthood
- Metabolite
- Extinction
- Behavior
- Alternative
- Locus
- Cue
- Lobe
- Analysis
- Pollen
- Fertility
- Allusion
- Theorist
- Subunit
- Recurrence
- Coping
- Ancestor
- Excavation
- Presence
- Inscription
- Methane
- Parenting
- Plutarch
- Survival
- Interpretation
- Research
- Explanation
- Motif
- Data
- Persistence
- Hypertension
- Confucius
- Progression
- Disparity
- Inflammation
- Origin
- Celt
- Mortality
- Adolescence
- Continuity
- Warming
- Longevity
- Sensitivity
- Familiarity
- Smoker
Adjective
- Credible
- Developmental
- Consistent
- Underlying
- Likely
- Deficient
- Textual
- Extant
- Preliminary
- Inaccurate
- Hydrophobic
- Norse
- Adaptive
- Vedic
- Confucian
- Adrenal
- Abnormal
- Contradictory
- Immune
- Suggestive
- Predictive
- Therapeutic
- Subjective
- Flawed
- Vertebrate
- Hellenistic
- Glacial
- Systemic
- Pathological
- Akin
- Inappropriate
- Epithelial
- Implicit
- Hypothetical
- Methodological
Wiktionary
SUGGEST, verb. (transitive) To imply but stop short of saying explicitly.
SUGGEST, verb. To make one suppose; cause one to suppose (something).
SUGGEST, verb. (transitive) To ask for without demanding.
SUGGEST, verb. (transitive) To recommend.
SUGGEST, verb. (obsolete) (transitive) To seduce; to prompt to evil; to tempt.
Dictionary definition
SUGGEST, verb. Make a proposal, declare a plan for something; "the senator proposed to abolish the sales tax".
SUGGEST, verb. Drop a hint; intimate by a hint.
SUGGEST, verb. Imply as a possibility; "The evidence suggests a need for more clarification".
SUGGEST, verb. Suggest the necessity of an intervention; in medicine; "Tetracycline is indicated in such cases".
SUGGEST, verb. Call to mind; "this remark evoked sadness".
Wise words
Occasionally in life there are those moments of unutterable
fulfillment which cannot be completely explained by those
symbols called words. Their meanings can only be articulated
by the inaudible language of the heart.