{"id":19042,"date":"2023-09-18T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2023-09-18T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/plainenglish.com\/?post_type=expressions&p=19042"},"modified":"2024-11-20T23:11:39","modified_gmt":"2024-11-21T05:11:39","slug":"figure-that","status":"publish","type":"expressions","link":"https:\/\/plainenglish.com\/expressions\/figure-that\/","title":{"rendered":"Figure that"},"content":{"rendered":"
“Figure” is a funny word; it’s often used as part of a phrasal verb. You learned “figure in<\/a> ” in lesson 316 and “figure out<\/a> ” back in lesson 80. But it can stand on its own <\/span>, too. If you say, “I figure that\u2026” it means, “I have come to the conclusion that\u2026”<\/p>\n For example, let’s say you’re planning a day trip <\/span> to a nearby town; it’s a few hours away. You want to do several things in that town and get back home before it’s too late. Your friend is skeptical <\/span>; she’s not sure how you’re going to fit it all in <\/span>. But you’ve thought about it and you have a plan.<\/p>\n So you can say, “I figure that we can leave early, by 8 a.m. We’ll get there by ten, do our activities until five, and then we’ll be home by seven in the evening.”<\/p>\n “I figure that\u2026” here means, “I’ve thought about it and I have come to the conclusion\u2026”<\/p>\n A few weeks ago, we talked about companies calling their employees back to the office<\/a> . Some employees won’t like that. But companies figure that their employees will be more productive <\/span> if they’re in the office a few days a week, and they figure that not too many employees will quit over the issue <\/span>. Or, they figure that the employees who do quit are the ones they don’t want anyway <\/span>.<\/p>\n So these are ways to use “figure that” to mean, “come to the conclusion that\u2026”<\/p>\n Sometimes you can use “figure that” in the past tense to describe your reasoning <\/span>, even if that reasoning proved to be flawed <\/span>.<\/p>\n CNBC, a business news site, published <\/span> a story about how much trouble Bed, Bath, and Beyond was in. That’s a company. Ryan Cohen was an investor in that company, Bed & Bath. He tweeted a “full moon with face emoji”<\/a> in response to the story.<\/p>\n