Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Infer

Infer , transitive verb

[Latin inferre to bring into, bring forward, occasion, infer; pref. in- in + ferre to carry, bring: compare French inférer. See 1 st Bear.]

1.
To bring on; to induce; to occasion. [Obsolete] — Harvey
2.
To offer, as violence. [Obsolete] — Spenser
3.
To bring forward, or employ as an argument; to adduce; to allege; to offer. [Obsolete]
Full well hath Clifford played the orator, Inferring arguments of mighty force. — Shakespeare
4.
To derive by deduction or by induction; to conclude or surmise from facts or premises; to accept or derive, as a consequence, conclusion, or probability; as, I inferred his determination from his silence.
To infer is nothing but by virtue of one proposition laid down as true, to draw in another as true. — Locke
Such opportunities always infer obligations. — Atterbury
5.
To show; to manifest; to prove. [Obsolete]
The first part is not the proof of the second, but rather contrariwise, the second inferreth well the first. — Sir T. More
This doth infer the zeal I had to see him. — Shakespeare