Explanation

  • To find a solution to a problem or the answer to a question through thinking, calculation, or investigation.
  • To come to understand something or someone.

Origin

  • Figure has roots in Latin figura (shape, form). The verb to figure developed meanings related to calculation (figure the cost) and mental shaping or understanding.
  • The phrasal verb figure out emerged in American English around the mid-19th century, emphasizing the process of deduction or problem-solving to arrive at an understanding or solution.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Suss (it) out (UK/Aus)
  • Crack it
  • Get it sorted
  • Nail it down (find a definitive answer/solution)

Vulgar/Emphatic:

  • Figure this fucking thing out.
  • Figure this shit out.

Milder:

  • Solve
  • Understand
  • Work out
  • Determine

Situational Appropriateness

  • Very common and versatile. Suitable for informal situations and most professional contexts.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Generally well-understood. The context usually makes it clear whether it means 'solve' or 'understand'.

Examples

  • I need to figure out how to assemble this bookshelf.
  • We'll figure out a way to pay for the trip.
  • It took me a while, but I finally figured out why the program was crashing.
  • I can't figure him out; he's so unpredictable.

Dialogue

Manager: The client needs the report by tomorrow, but the data is incomplete.

Employee: Okay, let me see... I think I can figure out how to extrapolate the missing values.

Manager: Excellent. Let me know if you run into trouble.

Employee: Will do. I should be able to figure it out.

Social Media Examples

  • Tweet: Trying to figure out the best way to organize my digital photos... it's chaos! Any tips? #organization #digitaldeclutter
  • Facebook Post: Finally figured out why my sourdough starter wasn't rising! Thanks for the tips everyone! #baking #sourdough
  • Instagram Caption: Exploring a new city and trying to figure out the map. Getting lost is part of the adventure, right? 😉 #travel #adventure

Response Patterns

  • Let me know if you figure it out.
  • I'm still trying to figure it out.
  • Don't worry, we'll figure something out together.
  • Aha! I figured it out!

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After someone says they need to figure something out:

  • Offering help: Need a hand figuring that out?
  • Asking for details: What are you trying to figure out?

After someone says they figured it out:

  • Asking for the solution: Great! What did you figure out? or How did you figure it out?
  • Implementing the solution or plan.

Conversation Starter

  • No. Typically used when discussing an existing problem or question.

Intonation

  • Stress typically falls on figure and out.
  • I need to FIGURE it OUT.
  • Can convey determination, frustration, or eventual success.

Generation Differences

  • Universal across generations.

Regional Variations

  • Extremely common in North American English, but widely used and understood globally.
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