deduce that• It can only be deduced that most young people learn about homosexuality from the negative and misinformedimages in the mainstreammedia.• It is easy to deduce that other systems do, too; many targets are being hit again and again.• From this he deduced that the boiler was too small and this led him on to wondering why the engine was so inefficient.• Thompson deduced that the buyer was trying to increase the stock price.• From this it is deduced that the lexicon provides adequate but not complete coverage.• You would deduce that the lymphocytes, having specificreceptors, would be selectively concentrated at that site.• From this he deduced that the mound had been reused as a place of burial on many separateoccasions.• Whatever happens, either we obtain an efficientsolution or we can deduce that there are no efficient solutions.• So I deduce that you feel pain.
Origindeduce
(1400-1500)Latindeducere“to lead out”, from ducere“to lead”