To bring about; to put into practice
"implement" is a correct and usable word in written English. It can be used as a verb or a noun, and it means to put something into practice or carry something out, or a tool or instrument used for a specific purpose. Example sentence: The company implemented a new policy for remote work during the pandemic.
The minister added that mining billionaire Andrew Forrest's review into Indigenous disadvantage was an "incredible document" but the government wasn't ready to implement its most contentious proposal – that all Australians receiving welfare should have their spending managed by government.
"Alongside this is the proposed legal duty on all public bodies to implement Prevent".
We had lots to do – we had to find a footwear production supplier, a shoe designer, a technical agency who could implement it and a PR agency to help us understand the fashion space.
There is also no way to implement this on a federal level as there is no federal sales tax, explains Kane.
I want the new government to focus on one major project at a time to execute, complete and implement for greater accountability and transparency rather than trying to execute multiple projects which are often mismanaged, incomplete and abandoned," she said.
Letwin – who acts as David Cameron's policy fixer – has been involved in increasingly tortuous negotiations to work out how to implement Lord Justice Leveson's proposals, which have taken him far away from the prime minister's initial response to the inquiry report when it was released in December.
But governments must also start to implement policies that properly price in the hidden costs of fossil fuels.
Thanks to Ludwig my first paper got accepted! The editor wrote me that my manuscript was well-written
Listya Utami K.
PhD Student in Biology, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia