Conjectural vs Theorized - What's the difference?
conjectural | theorized |
In the nature of a conjecture, or based on a conjecture.
* 1863 , Jules Festu, Practical lessons on the comparative construction of the verb in the French and English languages
* 1844 , Thomas Joseph Pettigrew, On Superstitions Connected with the History and Practice of Medicine and Surgery
Something that is conjectural; a conjecture.
* 1821 , Richard Franck, Northern memoirs (page 15)
As an adjective conjectural
is in the nature of a conjecture, or based on a conjecture.As a noun conjectural
is something that is conjectural; a conjecture.As a verb theorized is
past tense of theorize.conjectural
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- In conjectural statements, the French often use the Future or the Conditional, instead of the Perfect or the Pluperfect used in English.
- Medicine, however, has been, and still continues to be, an art so conjectural and uncertain, that our astonishment at the anxiety with which empirics have been sought after and followed is much diminished.
Synonyms
* hypotheticalNoun
(en noun)- Let us not assume such previous conjecturals , but rather consult and expostulate death, since death is the wages and the reward of sin.