|
GETACROSS |
Be understood |
|
ASSUMED |
Understood it to be |
|
ESOTERIC |
Obscure: likely to be understood by a few only |
|
IOU |
Informal offer understood at first to be record of debt |
|
|
COMPREHENSIBLY |
Intelligibly; in a manner to be comprehended or
understood. |
|
KNOWABLE |
That may be known; capable of being discovered,
understood, or ascertained. |
|
ABSTRUSE |
Remote from apprehension; difficult to be comprehended or
understood; recondite; as, abstruse learning. |
|
INTELLIGIBLY |
In an intelligible manner; so as to be understood;
clearly; plainly; as, to write or speak intelligibly. |
|
|
IMPLICIT |
Tacitly comprised; fairly to be understood, though not
expressed in words; implied; as, an implicit contract or agreement. |
|
PASIGRAPHY |
A system of universal writing, or a manner of writing
that may be understood and used by all nations. |
|
ENANTIOSIS |
A figure of speech by which what is to be understood
affirmatively is stated negatively, and the contrary; affirmation by
contraries. |
|
PERPLEX |
To involve; to entangle; to make intricate or complicated,
and difficult to be unraveled or understood; as, to perplex one with
doubts. |
|
ACCEPTATION |
The meaning in which a word or expression is
understood, or generally received; as, term is to be used according to
its usual acceptation. |
|
IMPLICATION |
An implying, or that which is implied, but not
expressed; an inference, or something which may fairly be understood,
though not expressed in words. |
|
INSCRUTABLE |
Unsearchable; incapable of being searched into and
understood by inquiry or study; impossible or difficult to be explained
or accounted for sat... |
|
ET CAETERA |
Others of the like kind; and the rest; and so on; -- used
to point out that other things which could be mentioned are to be
understood. Usually abbreviated into etc. or &c. (&c). |
|
SOLVE |
To explain; to resolve; to unfold; to clear up (what is
obscure or difficult to be understood); to work out to a result or
conclusion; as, to s... |
|
THAT |
...sually points out, or refers to, a person or thing previously
mentioned, or supposed to be understood. That, as a demonstrative, may
precede the... |