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"it is clearly implied" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it anytime you wish to emphasize that something is clearly implied or understood without having to be stated explicitly. For example, "The consequences of not following the safety instructions were not discussed in the presentation, but it is clearly implied that they could be serious."
Exact(3)
While the scientists behind it, Austen Heinz and Gilad Gome, don't mention sex, it is clearly implied, causing a new and particularly ridiculous body image standard to hover into view.
It is clearly implied by his exposition that no such city could exist.
What is curious here is the notion of 'limited political adversity', a condition that, it is clearly implied, obtains in advanced liberal democracies.
Similar(57)
"It was clearly implied," Mr. Mason said of the reason for withholding the money.
What wasn't said but is clearly implied is that it that Facebook thinks you should talk about things on Facebook because your words will find new audiences thanks to its powerful search engine and massive user base.
As the learned counsel say: Hunh? "It is probably correct that 'recuse' is a transitive verb," he half-concedes as he argues his case in Scalia v. Safire (with me presiding in this, my courtroom, and not recusing myself), "but it seems to me common and proper usage, with some transitive verbs, simply to omit the object that is clearly implied from the context.
The rest of the sentence goes unsaid, but is clearly implied: He wants you to think, not feel.
When Mr. Gram added to "Gladiator" what he describes as a far-from-explicit sex scene between the Roman emperor and his sister (played in the movie by Joaquin Phoenix and Connie Nielson), DreamWorks excised the passage -- even though an incestuous relationship is clearly implied in the film.
That is clearly implied by Figure 1E, but not established.
The relevance of SSA to eukaryotic genome stability is clearly implied when one considers that translocation formation by recombination between repetitive elements is a major consequence of acute radiation exposure, which results in the creation of hundreds of DSBs per genome (Argueso et al. 2008), and that these processes are likely to be recapitulated in higher eukaryotes (Weinstock et al. 2006).
Just F.Y.I., the story's original final line was "Like a parent and a child," which I cut, because it seemed less than graceful to nail down an idea that had already been clearly implied.
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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