suggest

/səg-ˈjest/

Latin suggestus, past participle of suggerere to pile up, furnish, suggest, from sub- + gerere to carry

verb

  1. to mention or imply as a possibility

  2. to propose as desirable or fitting

  3. to offer for consideration or as a hypothesis

suggested that he might bring his family

suggest a stroll

suggest imply hint intimate insinuate mean to convey an idea indirectly. suggest may stress putting into the mind by association of ideas, awakening of a desire, or initiating a train of thought. imply is close to suggest but may indicate a more definite or logical relation of the unexpressed idea to the expressed.

idiom

  1. to be thought of : to seem or become obvious

No good solution suggested itself.

noun

  1. a feature found in many computer programs (such as search engines and text messaging apps) that analyzes a user's typing based on various factors (such as the surrounding context, the user's typing history, and the first few typed letters) and presents a list of words and phrases that can be selected and entered

{d_link|Autocomplete|auto-complete}, as the name suggests, is the feature that completes a partial search query by matching the character string that the user types. Autosuggest is the clever little feature that makes it seem like Google is nesting in your brain, predicting what you want to search seemingly before you even know it yourself.