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"with all the implications" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
You can use this phrase when you want to acknowledge that there are deeper or wider consequences or meanings to something. It implies that there are many possible interpretations or outcomes that need to be considered. Example: "John's decision to quit his job has far-reaching consequences, with all the implications of losing his stable income and benefits."
Exact(20)
This is much more invasive: it allows for a search of a pupil's person, with all the implications that has.
The Internet is the ultimate (so far, anyway) tribal site, with all the implications of concord and conflict that implies.
The bias against lower-paid and less-influential workers is disturbingly evident, with all the implications that holds.
"You face the uncertainty about a war with Iraq, with all the implications that holds for energy prices and a broad impact on the economy.
Many become chronically sleep-deprived, with all the implications for behaviour that implies - irritability, inability to concentrate, poor attention span - which is inevitably reflected in their school performance.
People prognosticating about this world talk a lot about "video snacking," with all the implications for brevity and empty calories that the term suggests.
Similar(40)
How could he celebrate his goal, with all the implication it had for both sides?
I haven't figured out a way of sending multiple DMs on Twitter, but if and when this was possible it would bring with it all the implications of email's management by (in visibility.
I cannot escape the feeling that this long-undisclosed agreement [p799] comes close to being a wager on the outcome of the case, with all of the implications that entails.
With all the troubling implications, why did Mr. Woon and other Hong Kong officials push so energetically for the House to pass the bill?
"Younger women were coming in surviving on one tampon a day, with all the health implications that involves," explains Kate Tennant, a coordinator.
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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