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Word Meanings - GUESSER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

One who guesses; one who forms or gives an opinion without means of knowing.

Related words: (words related to GUESSER)

  • KNOWINGLY
    1. With knowledge; in a knowing manner; intelligently; consciously; deliberately; as, he would not knowingly offend. Strype. 2. By experience. Shak.
  • OPINIONATOR
    An opinionated person; one given to conjecture. South.
  • KNOWINGNESS
    The state or quality of being knowing or intelligent; shrewdness; skillfulness.
  • GIVES
    Fetters.
  • KNOW-NOTHING
    A member of a secret political organization in the United States, the chief objects of which were the proscription of foreigners by the repeal of the naturalization laws, and the exclusive choice of native Americans for office. Note: The
  • OPINIONATE
    Opinionated.
  • KNOWING
    1. Skilful; well informed; intelligent; as, a knowing man; a knowing dog. The knowing and intelligent part of the world. South. 2. Artful; cunning; as, a knowing rascal.
  • KNOW
    1. To have knowledge; to have a clear and certain perception; to possess wisdom, instruction, or information; -- often with of. Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider. Is. i. 3. If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine,
  • WITHOUT-DOOR
    Outdoor; exterior. "Her without-door form." Shak.
  • WITHOUTFORTH
    Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth. Chaucer.
  • KNOWABLENESS
    The state or quality of being knowable. Locke.
  • KNOWER
    One who knows. Shak.
  • OPINIONIST
    One fond of his own notions, or unduly attached to his own opinions. Glanvill.
  • KNOWLECHING
    Knowledge. Chaucer.
  • KNOWN
    of Know.
  • OPINIONABLE
    Being, or capable of being, a matter of opinion; that can be thought; not positively settled; as, an opinionable doctrine. C. J. Ellicott.
  • WITHOUTEN
    Without. Chaucer.
  • KNOW-ALL
    One who knows everything; hence, one who makes pretension to great knowledge; a wiseacre; -- usually ironical.
  • OPINIONATED
    Stiff in opinion; firmly or unduly adhering to one's own opinion or to preconceived notions; obstinate in opinion. Sir W. Scott.
  • KNOWABLE
    That may be known; capable of being discovered, understood, or ascertained. Thus mind and matter, as known or knowable, are only two different series of phenomena or qualities. Sir W. Hamilton.
  • PREKNOWLEDGE
    Prior knowledge.
  • FOREKNOWER
    One who foreknows.
  • ACKNOWLEDGE
    1. To of or admit the knowledge of; to recognize as a fact or truth; to declare one's belief in; as, to acknowledge the being of a God. I acknowledge my transgressions. Ps. li. 3. For ends generally acknowledged to be good. Macaulay. 2. To own
  • BEKNOW
    To confess; to acknowledge. Chaucer.
  • UNKNOW
    1. To cease to know; to lose the knowledge of. 2. To fail of knowing; to be ignorant of.
  • UNKNOWLEDGED
    Not acknowledged or recognized. For which bounty to us lent Of him unknowledged or unsent. B. Jonson.
  • ACKNOWLEDGER
    One who acknowledges.
  • OVERKNOWING
    Too knowing or too cunning.
  • SELF-OPINION
    Opinion, especially high opinion, of one's self; an overweening estimate of one's self or of one's own opinion. Collier.
  • FOREKNOWINGLY
    With foreknowledge. He who . . . foreknowingly loses his life. Jer. Taylor.

 

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