What is another word for by implication?

Pronunciation: [ba͡ɪ ˌɪmplɪkˈe͡ɪʃən] (IPA)

The phrase "by implication" implies that a statement or idea is suggested or hinted at rather than explicitly stated. Synonyms for this term include "implicitly," "indirectly," "tacitly," "subtly," "allusively," and "inferentially." These words convey a similar meaning, indicating that something is suggested or understood without being explicitly stated. "Implicitly" suggests that the meaning is conveyed through a subtle or indirect manner, while "indirectly" implies that something is hinted at without being directly stated. "Tactily" suggests that the implication is conveyed through nonverbal cues or subtext, while "subtly" implies a delicate or understated suggestion. "Allusively" and "inferentially" suggest that the meaning is conveyed through references or connections to other ideas or concepts.

What are the hypernyms for By implication?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with By implication

  • There is exact correspondence between a world where everything seems to be in a state of mere “becoming,” leaving no place for the changeless and permanent, and the state of mind of men who find all reality in this same “becoming,” denying by implication true knowledge as well as the object of that knowledge, by which we mean the transcendent and universal principles.
    René Guénon
  • He managed to lie by implication while speaking words that were the literal truth, a skill he had grown good at, if not proud of.
    David Brin
  • Before it became a winning slogan for Donald Trump, "America First" was a code. On the eve of the worst war the world has ever known, it was Nazi-sympathizer Charles Lindbergh's code for an America which put White Christian Americans of European ancestry before all else. And which pictured Jews – as Trump did just last week by implication – as enemies of America.
    Bradley Burston
  • Of course, the apparent disarray could have stemmed entirely from my own ignorance. But when I revealed my impression of confusion and dissonance to one of the attendees, he reassured me that my perception was accurate. “It’s a mess,” he said of the conference (and, by implication, the whole business of interpreting quantum mechanics). The problem, he noted, arose because, for the most part, the different interpretations of quantum mechanics cannot be empirically distinguished from one another; philosophers and physicists favor one interpretation over another for aesthetic and philosophical—that is, subjective—reasons.
    John Horgan (journalist)
  • By laying such stress on the moral aspect of social institutions, Marx emphasized our responsibility for the more remote social repercussions of our actions; for instance, of such actions as may help to prolong the life of socially unjust institutions. But although is, in fact, largely a treatise on social ethics, these ethical ideas are never represented as such. They are expressed only by implication, but not the less forcibly on that account, since the implications are very obvious. Marx, I believe, avoided an explicit moral theory, because he hated preaching. Deeply distrustful of the moralist, who usually preaches water and drinks wine, Marx was reluctant to formulate his ethical convictions explicitly. The principles of humanity and decency were for him matters that needed no discussion, matters to be taken for granted. (In this field, too, he was an optimist.) He attacked the moralists because he saw them as the sycophantic apologists of a social order which he felt to be immoral; he attacked the eulogists of liberalism because of their self-satisfaction, because of their identification of freedom with the formal liberty then existing within a social system which destroyed freedom. Thus, by implication, he admitted his love for freedom; and in spite of his bias, as a philosopher, for holism, he was certainly not a collectivist, for he hoped that the state would ‘wither away’. Marx’s faith, I believe, was fundamentally a faith in the open society.
    Karl Marx

Related words: by inference, by inference in a legal context, infer by implication, by meaning, implied, suggest implicitly

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