Sentence examples for implications in the words from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

According to some observers, she herself may not have grasped its implications; in the words of a columnist at Photoplay, "I wonder if Grace Kelly knew she had so much S.A".

Similar(59)

There's also an implication in the word "test" that people who function better while not holding opposing ideas in their minds and therefore choose that state for the sake of their own happiness are somehow less first-rate than people who rush headlong into contradictions.

Who does not want to explode it, do something truly new, and rouse the implication slumbering in the word "novel"?

Audley conveys a brutish love through violence in repose; Leo is the reluctant criminal, able to prove devotion by his mere implication in the plot every word and gesture comes out like a blow meant as a caress.

Mr. Antufyev said he had objected to the implication in the Polish wording that the plane crash was a "continuation" of the Katyn massacre, for which Soviet and Russian officials have apologized, while he said the crash was not Russia's fault.

Yet those in support of the treaty argued that its rejection by 53% of those who voted, was due to lack of knowledge about, or misunderstandings of, the treaty and its implications in other words, in this case no didn't mean "no", it meant "don't know".

As opening day has drawn near, public commentary spared no facet of Nationals Park, including its hitting dimensions, its economic implications and such details as, in the words of one headline writer, "Yes, You Can Bring Your Own Food to Ballpark".

By 2005, by which time Mr. Arnott was both marketing fundamentally weighted indexes and promoting their "profound" (his word) implications in the pages of The Financial Analysts Journal, his company had devised a much more complex weighting system, using revenue, earnings, dividends and book value.

Is the implication that the words we've been reading are transcendent, or meaningless in an uncaring universe?

The current implications of the word "normal" in American life are pervasive, influencing many aspects of an individual's life: schools that one attends, jobs that one is qualified for, events that one is invited to and can participate in, abilities that one is perceived to have, modes of travel that one has access to, and relationships that one is able to engage with.

Bozorgmehr and colleagues have dissected in detail many of these issues around the object of knowledge, noting the difficulties in understanding the implications of the word 'global' [ 4].

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