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Looking for synonyms for "suspect"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(adj)
Distrustful or tending to suspect.
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(n)
Lack of trust or confidence; distrust, untrust.
Problematic; open to doubt or challenge.
(v)
(ambitransitive) To be undecided about; to lack confidence in; to disbelieve, to question.
To put no trust in; to have no confidence in.
Amusing; humorous; comical.
Overspread with shade; sheltered from the glare of light or sultry heat.
(intransitive) To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises.
(law) The person charged with an offense; the defendant in a criminal case.
(colloquial, sometimes derogatory) Non-heterosexual or non-cisgender: homosexual, bisexual, asexual, transgender, etc.
(figurative) Suspicious; inspiring doubt.
The act of suspecting something or someone, especially of something wrong.
(adv)
(manner) In a way that arouses suspicion.
(of a statement, matter, or thing) Arousing doubt; questionable; open to suspicion.
Experiencing or showing doubt, skeptical.
Not certain; unsure.
Open to multiple interpretations.
Of low quality.
(UK, Ireland, Commonwealth) Unsound and unreliable.
A person who commits an offense against the law, a lawbreaker.
Abbreviation of unsubscribe. [(intransitive) To cancel a subscription, especially to an online service.]
Not reliable.
The person or thing at fault for a problem or crime.
(transitive, law, followed by "of") To charge with having committed a crime or offence.
(uncountable) A strong, unpleasant emotion or feeling caused by actual or perceived danger or threat.
Rendered less effective.
(slang, law enforcement) A perpetrator.
One who perpetrates; especially, one who commits an offence or crime.
Accusation.
Not natural.
(intransitive) To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment.
Obvious or easy to notice.
Someone who attacks or assails another violently, or criminally.
Asserted but not proved.
(transitive) To explicitly mention (something) as a possibility for consideration, often to recommend it.
Certainty.
Having electricity.
A person who is indicted.
(heading) To sense or think emotionally or judgmentally.
(transitive) To ponder, to go over in one's mind.
One who accuses; one who brings a charge of crime or fault.
(transitive) To accept as true, particularly without absolute certainty (i.e., as opposed to knowing).
(transitive) To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose.
(transitive, intransitive) To take for granted; to conclude, with less than absolute supporting data; to believe.
Based on presumption or conjecture; inferred, likely, presumed.
To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof.
Appearing to be the most probable, often with some preparations starting to be made for it.
To reach a partly (or totally) unconfirmed conclusion; to engage in conjecture; to speculate.
A person who commits murder.
(ambitransitive) To predict or believe that something will happen
(transitive) To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind.
Placed in a lower class, rank, or position.
(intransitive) To have its proper place.
Someone who is detained, especially in custody or confinement.
An individual who has been granted personhood; usually a human being.
An adult male human.
(collective, dated, fantasy) (The) people, humanity, man(kind).
(Australia, construction, informal) Steel used to reinforce concrete.
Informal spelling of night. [(countable) The time when the Sun is below the horizon when the sky is dark.]
Someone who shoots something; a gunner, archer, etc.
Clothes that encircle the neck.
(colloquial) A man or boy; a fellow.
(aviation, military) A military aircraft designed to carry and drop bombs.
Someone who intentionally kills a person, especially a professional who kills a public or political figure.
(N)
a live album by bassist Jonas Hellborg, released on 26 February 2002 through Bardo Records.
A worded or expressed sentence, phrase, or only a word on its own, which asks for information, a reply, or a response; an interrogative.
The imagination.
(formal) A statement or an idea which is unproven, but is thought to be true; a guess.
(intransitive) To make an inference based on inconclusive evidence; to surmise or conjecture.
(transitive) To introduce (something) as a reasoned conclusion; to conclude by reasoning or deduction, as from premises or evidence.
(colloquial) To conclude, as by an enumeration and balancing of chances; hence, to think; to suppose; -- followed by an objective clause
(transitive) To think about seriously.
(transitive) To make a claim as justification or proof; to make an assertion without proof.
An assumption.
(transitive) To perceive the truth or factuality of; to be certain of; to be certain that.
(with a copula verb, often with about) Having an incorrect belief.
A theory, idea, or guess; an intuitive impression that something will happen.
In a state of believing, especially from evidence but not necessarily.
The act of making surmises.
Thinking about unpleasant things that have happened or that might happen; feeling afraid and unhappy.
Able to be sensibly presumed.
Likely or most likely to be true.
Probable; having a greater-than-even chance of occurring.
Supposed or presumed.
(conjunctive) Despite that; however.
(degree) To a given extent or degree.
(uncommon) Capable of being presumed, or being presumed as such.
(uncountable) Rational thinking (or the capacity for it); the cognitive faculties, collectively, of conception, judgment, deduction and intuition.
A difficulty that has to be resolved or dealt with.
Possibly.
Not aware or informed; lacking knowledge; unmindful.
In a manner which makes the fact or conclusion evident; obviously; as may be clearly inferred.
Misspelling of believe. [(transitive) To accept as true, particularly without absolute certainty (i.e., as opposed to knowing).]
(transitive) To mistake the identity of (something or someone).