0 to suggest something bad or unpleasant in an indirect manner -- menganginkan
He insinuated that she was lying.
1 to gradually gain someone’s respect, trust, or affection by pretending to be sincere -- mengambil hati
He insinuated himself into Sarah’s affections.
2 to slowly move yourself or a part of your body into a particular place -- menggerakkan
Contamination is a word with so many negative associations, especially in an essay that has dwelt upon nuclear testing : in terms of historicity, it insinuates a kind of pollutant ' 'fallout.
Putting up straw people and insinuating that these would correspond to real people's (here our) positions and then fighting with these selfcreated windmills is done several times in the article.
Music seems positively to demand interdisciplinary responses, because, for example, it insinuates itself into so much of human life.
The government insinuated that some counties preferred to keep patients on waiting lists instead of sending them to other counties.
His position insinuates that even though causal loops do not happen, they could happen.
A cotton swab is gently insinuated into the base of each sulcus, breaking all arachnoid adhesions.
The passage insinuates that the halls themselves are nothing less than a gleeful theatricalization of public space.
However, such an approach often incorporates a disparaging attitude towards the student's powers of discrimination, and certainly insinuates that personal preferences are trivial.