implying 的定义
im·plied, im·ply·ing.
- to indicate or suggest without being explicitly stated: His words implied a lack of faith.
- to signify or mean.
- to involve as a necessary circumstance: Speech implies a speaker.
- Obsolete. to enfold.
implying 近义词
indicate, mean
更多implying例句
- PayPal’s bullishness on cryptocurrencies, Schulman implied, is based on early response to last month’s crypto offering.
- The first number implies that it has managed to monetize well as its usage, the second number, has spiked.
- Those facts don’t imply that pandemic-induced friction won’t add up.
- A natural assumption to make since the name “passage indexing” implies…erm… “passage” and “indexing.”
- The way she writes her songs, just guitar and vocals, she implies where the drums are going to be.
- Ferret is a carefully chosen comparison, implying diligence but absolutely no imagination.
- However, even reputable news sources and well meaning celebrities are guilty of implying that she should have known better.
- The researchers found that leaky gut preceded inflammation, implying that the leakiness plays a key role in disease development.
- What they are implying,” she sputtered, “is beneath contempt!
- The judge did rule that one respondent crossed the line by implying that Im Tirtzu espouses Nazi race theory.
- In Roman times it received the dignity of a municipium—implying municipal status and Roman citizenship for its free inhabitants.
- The verb “to bag,” for instance, is in jocular use for implying a petty appropriation of property.
- The dog came up, licked his hand, and made signs implying that he expected some great reward for signal services rendered.
- Oak cast his eyes down the field in a way implying that it was useless to attempt argument.
- Milton occasionally, however, uses the word merely in the sense of magician or magical, without implying contempt: see Lyc.