0 present participle of imply
1 to communicate an idea or feeling without saying it directly:
The report, which is viewed as a bellwether for economic trends, implied that the national economy could be slowing down.
Her statement implies a lack of confidence in the management of the company.
What are you implying?
A connection between the events has been implied in several news reports.
The relationship implied a high degree of trust between the two parties.
It yields a transformation to new dependent variables implying a reduction of the number of equations.
This marginalisation as 'women in rock' is a way of keeping women as outsiders and of implying there are many artists belonging to this genre.
But these factors are relatively stable, implying that democracy exhibits inertia.