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verb

speculate

SPEHK-yuu-layt
verb
1
To guess or form a theory about something without having solid proof.
"Reporters speculated about the reasons behind the sudden resignation."
"It's pointless to speculate until we have the test results."
2
To buy or trade something risky, hoping to sell later at a profit.
"He lost his savings speculating on volatile tech stocks."

How to Use Speculate

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo guess based on limited facts, or to take a financial risk hoping for a big payoff.

Common mistake

Don't confuse with "spectate" (to watch an event) — they look similar but are unrelated in meaning.

Easily confused with
spectate
Common pairings
speculate about speculate on the stock market speculate wildly

Word Forms

speculated past tense, speculates singular

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Fill the Gap

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Reporters _____ about the reasons behind the sudden resignation.

Etymology

From Latin speculārī ("to watch, observe, spy"), from specula ("a watchtower") — originally about "keeping watch," it drifted toward "forming a theory" and later "taking a financial gamble."

Rhymes for speculate

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial