The verb 'suppose' entered English around 1303 from Old French 'supposer,' meaning 'to assume, to put under.' The Old French word descends from Latin 'suppōnere' (past participle 'suppositum'), a compound of 'sub-' (under, below) and 'pōnere' (to put, to place). The literal meaning is 'to place under' — to put something beneath something else, either physically or conceptually.
The semantic journey from 'placing under' to 'assuming' is one of the more elegant metaphorical shifts in the '-pose' family. A supposition is, etymologically, something placed under an argument or line of reasoning as its base — an unproven premise that supports everything built above it. We 'suppose' something to be true when we place it underneath our reasoning as a foundation, without necessarily having confirmed its solidity. The metaphor captures
In classical Latin, 'suppōnere' had a more concrete and somewhat sinister meaning: to substitute, to place one thing secretly under or in place of another. A 'suppositus' was a substitute, often a fraudulent one. This sense survives in the rare English adjective 'supposititious,' meaning 'fraudulently substituted' — particularly applied to a child placed in the position of a legitimate heir. Roman law dealt extensively with supposititious children, and the concept passed into medieval and early
The medical term 'suppository' is another relative, from Latin 'suppositōrium' — something 'placed under' or 'placed up into' the body. This is one of the few derivatives that preserves the strictly physical sense of the Latin original.
In English, 'suppose' developed several distinct but related uses. The primary sense — to assume or believe something provisionally — is the most common: 'I suppose you're right,' 'Suppose it rains tomorrow.' The tentative, hedging quality of 'suppose' makes it a crucial pragmatic tool in English conversation. 'I suppose so' conveys reluctant agreement; 'I don't suppose you could...' is a polite request form; 'Suppose we...' introduces
The passive construction 'supposed to' has become one of the most common expressions in English, meaning 'expected to' or 'meant to': 'You're supposed to arrive at nine,' 'It's supposed to be sunny.' This usage, which became standard in the eighteenth century, treats the expectation as something 'placed under' the situation — a baseline assumption about what should happen. The pronunciation typically reduces to /səˈpoʊst/ in connected speech, dropping the final /d/ before /t/.
The compound 'presuppose' (from medieval Latin 'praesuppōnere') adds the prefix 'prae-' (before) to create a word meaning 'to suppose in advance' — to take something for granted before the argument even begins. In philosophy and linguistics, 'presupposition' is a technical term for an implicit assumption embedded in a statement. The sentence 'Have you stopped cheating?' presupposes that the addressee was cheating — this presupposition is 'placed under' the question
The noun 'supposition' entered English in the fifteenth century and occupies a more formal register than 'assumption' or 'guess.' A supposition is a structured, provisional hypothesis — something placed under a line of inquiry as a starting point. Scientists make suppositions; detectives work on suppositions; philosophers examine the suppositions underlying arguments.
Phonologically, 'suppose' follows the standard pattern: stress on the second syllable, /səˈpoʊz/. The Latin prefix 'sub-' reduces to /sə-/ in English, losing its labial consonant before the following /p/. This reduction is regular and appears in many English words from Latin (suggest, sustain, suspect).