Definitionn. an impression that something might be the case
Last update: January 20, 2017
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My own suspicion is that the Americans may try for a war crimes indictment against Saddam Hussein. [adjective]
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Yet it saw political concord give way to suspicion and resentment. [noun]
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"The fidelity of 'The Long Rifle' is well known to me," returned Munro, "and is above suspicion; though his usual good fortune seems, at last, to have failed." [noun]
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Fareham saw her distress, and looked at her with angry suspicion. [noun]
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He felt that it would never do for him, with such a secret, to be caught, and brought to book, or even to awake suspicion of his having it. [noun]
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CHAPTER LVII BELOW THE LINE Of the British Admirals then on duty, Collingwood alone, so far as now appears, had any suspicion of Napoleon's real plan. [noun]
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But a mere suspicion does not justify an act so ungracious to the commander, and personally so unkind to me. [noun]
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The London Trader is too large for the purpose, and she is under suspicion now. [noun]
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But I must have passed it fifty times without the least suspicion of it. [noun]
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Because you are afraid of incurring suspicion, if you continue to prepare. [noun]
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I might remain there from year to year without any suspicion arising, so stupid are the people all around, and so well is my name known among them. [noun]
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