English English Dictionary

English - English

to strongly suggest the truth or existence of something in English:

1. imply imply


Are you implying that I am not loyal to this company? Because I am!
His silence seemed to imply agreement.
What does his silence imply?
What does "There is a tide" imply?
Are you implying that...?
But, that can imply good or bad!
Does "juice" in Japan imply juice in a can?
The more I study for an exam, the worse I do! I guess correlation does not imply causation.
He's been implying from the start that he knows who the thief is.
What are you implying?
This may or may not be an error, but it does not necessarily imply a systemic failing.
Socialism implies ​equality. Are you implying (that) I'm ​fat?
The police officer said that asking a few questions did not imply that a person was guilty of any offence.
His silence seemed to imply agreement. The survey implies (that) more people are moving house than was thought.
Many websites prohibit misleading usernames that imply an official role on the website such as "admin," "administrator," "webmaster," "system operator," "sysop," or "moderator."

English word "to strongly suggest the truth or existence of something"(imply) occurs in sets:

TOEFL - Most important words 251 - 275