Dictionary
to presumptions
noun
The act of presuming, or something presumed
Exact(2)
So, with simple reasoning and a stiff-arm to presumptions, Locker will return for his senior year and try to lead the rebuilding Huskies to respectability.
Harry Sidebottom fairly presumes you wouldn't know a hoplite if one thrust a spear at you, and that you grasped legionary tactics from watching the DVD of Gladiator: he uses our instinctive understanding of what has been sold since classical Greece as the "western way of war" as the basis for a boot camp for the brain - a short, sharp shock to presumptions.
Similar(58)
In addition to issues related to presumption of innocence, this raises many questions about privacy.
"We believe these types of conditions threaten multiple constitutional rights," she said, listing the right to presumption of innocence and the right to reasonable bail.
It attempts to avoid presumptions, thereby enabling a broad-brush picture of key concerns to emerge as the ground for theory building.
It is not so difficult to make presumptions.
Juve's coach, Antonio Conte, refuses to make presumptions until the season is half finished.
Brown wrote that there's no "real evidence that these officers confront hazards that gave rise to these presumptions".
However, in contrast to some presumptions in the 5q deletions, as yet, no prognostic differences have been elaborated between different regions of deletions (reviewed in [ 20]).
People have a right to the presumption of innocence, to a free trial.
Perhaps Freud is too cynical regarding conscious autonomy, but he is right to question our presumption to it.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com