guess

pronunciation

How to pronounce guess in British English: UK [ɡes]word uk audio image

How to pronounce guess in American English: US [ɡes] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    a message expressing an opinion based on incomplete evidence
    an estimate based on little or no information
  • Verb:
    expect, believe, or suppose
    put forward, of a guess, in spite of possible refutation
    judge tentatively or form an estimate of (quantities or time)
    guess correctly; solve by guessing

Word Origin

guess
guess: [13] In the earliest records we have of the verb guess, it is used for ‘take aim’. The modern sense ‘estimate’ did not emerge until the mid- 14th century. It seems to be of Scandinavian origin, and probably comes ultimately from the same base as produced get (Old Norse geta meant ‘guess’ as well as ‘get’, and the semantic progression hinted at by the intermediate ‘take aim’ is probably via ‘lock on to something in one’s sights’ to ‘fix on a particular figure’ – by implication, without exact calculation). Guesstimate, a blend of guess and estimate, is a US coinage of the 1930s.=> get
guess (v.)
c. 1300, gessen "to infer from observation, perceive, find out; form an opinion, judge, decide, discern; evaluate, estimate the number, importance, etc. of," perhaps from Scandinavian (compare Middle Danish gitse, getze "to guess," Old Norse geta "guess, get"), or from or influenced by Middle Dutch gessen, Middle Low German gissen "to guess," all from Proto-Germanic *getan "to get" (see get (v.)). The prehistoric sense evolution then would be from "get," to "take aim at," to "to estimate." Meaning "to hit upon the right answer" is from 1540s. Spelling with gu- is late 16c., sometimes attributed to Caxton and his early experience as a printer in Bruges. Related: Guessed; guessing. Guessing game attested from 1650s. To keep (someone) guessing "keep him in a state of suspense" is from 1896, American English. [T]he legitimate, English sense of this word is to conjecture; but with us, and especially in New England, it is constantly used in common conversation instead of to believe, to suppose, to think, to imagine, to fancy. [Bartlett, "Dictionary of Americanisms," 1848]
guess (n.)
c. 1300, "indiscriminate conclusion, guesswork, doubtful supposition," from guess (v.). Mid-15c. as "considered opinion." Verbal shrug phrase your guess is as good as mine attested from 1902.

Antonym

vt. & vi.

verify prove

Example

1. What that may mean is anyone 's guess .
2. I guess I need even more data .
3. I guess I just saw you .
4. But I guess it centers around how you define communication .
5. So I guess all writers are depressed ?

more: >How to Use "guess" with Example Sentences