No.Could I use the verb "figure" as in the following sentence?
"He's doing a great job. He figures to have been a very good student in college."
You can't use it to replace "seem".So I can't use it to mean to appear likely to do something ? Or it's just the use of the present perfect?
No doubt you will come up with some example in which it might be interpreted in that way, but the simple answer is "No".So I can't use it to mean to appear likely to do something ?
No doubt you will come up with some example in which it might be interpreted in that way, but the simple answer is "No".
I'd say it's more likely to mean "Engle thinks he's going to be in the mix..."In fact I already did!"Engle figures to be in the mix for Utes"! I guess "figures" in this one mean "seems"? Mail Tribune (Southern Oregon's News Source).
I'd say it's more likely to mean "Engle thinks he's going to be in the mix..."
That dictionary defintion does not seem to me to reflect normal usage. Which dictionary was it from?b [no obj] : to appear likely to do something
▪ She figures to finish by noon. ▪ He doesn't figure to win. [=he probably won't win]"
That dictionary defintion does not seem to me to reflect normal usage. Which dictionary was it from?
ps (a little later). My apologies. I have checked some of the examples in COCA, and it does seem to have that meaning at times. It's new to me.
If a student's been getting A's for a while, could I say "He figures to study a lot" to mean that he probably studies a lot?
No, you can say "I figure (that) he studies a lot."
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