to ditch school - matar aula 2023
imply
[ɪmˈplʌɪ]
VERB
imply (verbo) · implies (terceira pessoa do presente) · implied (pretérito) · implied (particípio passado) · implying (particípio presente)
indicate the truth or existence of (something) by suggestion rather than explicit reference:
"salesmen who use jargon to imply superior knowledge" · "the report implies that two million jobs might be lost"
(of a fact or occurrence) suggest (something) as a logical consequence:
"the forecasted traffic increase implied more roads and more air pollution"
ORIGIN
late Middle English: from Old French emplier, from Latin implicare, from in- ‘in’ + plicare ‘to fold’. The original sense was ‘entwine’; in the 16th and 17th centuries the word also meant ‘employ’. Compare with employ and implicate.
Palavras Semelhantes e Opostas
VERB
indicate the truth or existence of (something) by suggestion rather than explicit reference:
insinuate
suggest
hint
intimate
implicate
indicate
give someone to understand
(of a fact or occurrence) suggest (something) as a logical consequence:
involve
entail
mean
point to
signify
indicate
signal
necessitate
shriveled definition: 1. dry, smaller than normal, and covered with lines as if by crushing or folding: 2. much smaller….
A filibuster is a strategy employed in the United States Senate, whereby a minority can delay a vote on proposed legislation by making long speeches or introducing irrelevant issues123. It is a way of preventing a law from being passed by using the rules or making long speeches to delay voting on it2. Filibusters can force withdrawal of a bill1.