Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigThe phrase "accept implicitly" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to the act of agreeing to something without explicitly stating it or without questioning it.
Example: "By not voicing any objections, the team seemed to accept implicitly the new policy changes."
Alternatives: "agree without question" or "assume without doubt."
Exact(5)
Today, we accept implicitly that great artists are equally at home in opera and song, but Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau was the first of his kind.
And yet, as Christmas approached, according to Smith, both the Pentagon and the State Department "seemed to accept implicitly the Blackwill thesis that India had the moral high ground and its military response was justified".
At the center of Iran's problems is President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who said recently that Iran should accept the deal, saying that his tough stance in past years had finally forced the West to accept implicitly Iran's right to enrich uranium.
It is also to accept, implicitly, the premises of supersessionism -- the belief that Judaism is a prideful religion of absurd laws and onerous responsibilities from which Jesus Christ was sent to rescue us.
What is striking about these letters — and the rest that were not published — is that they all accept, implicitly or explicitly, that the problems I described are real and need to be addressed.
Similar(55)
In that case, NATO accepted implicitly that its act was illegal.
Our interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan are accepted implicitly as good, as are ID cards and migration.
Where it falls down, as do many of those reports, is in accepting, implicitly or explicitly, the euphemistic re-characterisation of mass surveillance as "bulk interception" or "bulk collection", thus endorsing an incursion into our private lives, papers, thoughts and communications that has no precedent in the law of the land.
Now users will question the goodwill and impartiality of others they accepted implicitly before — others they may never have even given a second look.
In accepting and expecting a broken Jesus to sound weak; to be barely audible, the audience accepts – implicitly – that the St John Passion is no longer about an abstract standard of singing, but about the story.
Participants in these sports, by the very act of taking part, have implicitly accepted the inevitability of rough contact.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com