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Discover Ludwig"may implicitly" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to indicate that something could be suggested or understood without being stated directly. For example, "The professor may implicitly expect that everyone has read the assigned chapters before attending the lecture."
Exact(34)
"This practice suggests that the government may implicitly accept the principle that domestic workers do not hold their own passports," says an Amnesty report, "My Sleep Is My Break": Exploitation of Migrant Domestic Workers in Qatar, published on Wednesday.
At this point in the story, there's generally a shift in tone, an opening up of time or perspective, and the author may implicitly declare his autonomous existence and greet the reader.
But just as makeover shows enumerate a person's purported faults before correcting them, a person who offers a cosmetic procedure to a loved one may implicitly criticize the recipient's looks.
In the commission's own words: "The fact that some other countries may implicitly subsidise their wholesale/investment banks does not make it sensible for the UK to do so".
In that sense, the story might be a true lagging indicator while it may implicitly be a sign that in the early weeks of the Administration Geithner was, in fact, perceived to be a potential liability, it doesn't really tell us much about how people are feeling about Geithner today.
In that sense, the story might be a true lagging indicator — while it may implicitly be a sign that in the early weeks of the Administration Geithner was, in fact, perceived to be a potential liability, it doesn't really tell us much about how people are feeling about Geithner today.
Similar(26)
Each wave in a system may be implicitly, or explicitly, or partially implicitly and partially explicitly treated depending on its associated Courant number in each numerical cell, and the scheme is able to smoothly switch between implicit and explicit calculations.
The F.E.C.'s limited investigation found that Ailes "may have implicitly communicated to Mr. McCarthy" about "developing and airing negative spots".
His absence went along with a post-Holocaust suspicion of the very German cultural tradition that Mahler may have implicitly questioned, but honored, too.
"If we don't understand what the tactics are, we cannot really identify them when children may be implicitly referring to us about the kind of things they get up to when they are interacting online with others," said Lorenzo-Dus.
But Mr. Martins is not the first choreographer to use Strauss's Burleske for Piano and Orchestra, and the relationship between the couples may refer implicitly to "Dim Lustre," a work once in City Ballet's repertory.
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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