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Example sentences for "implies"

Lexicographically close words:
implications; implicit; implicitly; implied; impliedly; implieth; imploie; imploied; implora; implore
  1. The note at the end of the first Journal evidently implies that when the Government have done with the Journals, then Miss Gordon is to have them.

  2. It implies you are his superior, for the greater praises the smaller; and though that may be the case, it is not necessary to announce it to the smaller.

  3. This implies that the recitations were not single, as if by poet laureates, but that many shared in them.

  4. Now this implies that his point of departure should be one from which by a single change of wind he could easily be driven upon Ithaca.

  5. Possession implies the dispersion of the conquerors, and, in such cases as these, their free intermixture with the vanquished.

  6. This implies an established festival, and nothing beyond it.

  7. This implies their movement southward, and makes it probable that we should meet them in Bruttium, on their way to Sicily, perhaps pressing, in that region, upon the Sicani.

  8. He does not mention the cause; but this abrupt allusion to the father of Phyleus implies that he was a person of note.

  9. It is further observable, that Homer implies distinctly the existence of various tribes of Pelasgi under that same name in various and widely separated places.

  10. When Homer makes Perseus the son of Jupiter, he certainly implies of this sovereign, as of Minos, that he had no known paternal ancestry, and perhaps that he falsely claimed a maternal one, in the country where he attained to fame.

  11. More needful of explanation is the reference which implies that the English writer is not working from a manuscript, but is reproducing something which he has heard read or recounted, or which he has read for himself at some time in the past.

  12. Such comment implies a mind surprisingly awake to the problems of translation.

  13. This implies no disparagement of the incomparable geniality of Leech's drawings, which in that respect have never been equalled, unless by Randolph Caldecott.

  14. Enemy is the only one of these words which necessarily implies a state of personal hostility.

  15. It implies not only native vigor of mind, but that ease and promptitude of execution which arise from mental training.

  16. Ample implies largeness, producing a sufficiency or fullness of supply for every want; as, ample stores or resources, ample provision.

  17. Difficult commonly implies more skill and sagacity than hard, as when there is disproportion between the means and the end.

  18. Foolish rises higher, and implies either a perversion of that faculty, or an absolute weakness or fatuity of mind; as, foolish enterprises.

  19. To achieve (to come to the end or arrive at one's purpose) usually implies some enterprise or undertaking of importance, difficulty, and excellence.

  20. Tartness denotes slight asperity and implies some degree of intellectual readiness.

  21. It usually implies some degree of difficulty contended with; as, he effected or accomplished what he intended, his purpose, but little.

  22. No: the indeterminate condition of the soul implies something positive (besides something negative).

  23. It does not necessitate that the similar objects be of the same kind; it rather implies that they are of different kinds, inasmuch as they resemble each other differently.

  24. For, in reference to the things contained in the universe, this implies that they are begotten or produced; for successive enumeration and description implies an eternal begetting, and that those objects exist eternally in their present state.

  25. This thought presupposes an anterior thought which implies no movement.

  26. If then it remained immovable, it would not embrace everything either vitally or locally; it would not preserve the life of the interior parts of the body it possesses, because the bodily life implies movement.

  27. The suchness of being implies a previously existing being and quiddity.

  28. Thus we cause an emanation, or rather an actualization which implies no loss to the intelligible, to pass from the intelligible into the sense-world.

  29. But form, to be received, implies a substrate, that might be determined by the difference.

  30. Consequently, He has the conception of Himself, a conception which implies consciousness, and which consists in eternal repose, and in a thought, but in a thought different from that of intelligence.

  31. Either, neither of these two things implies the other, or they imply each other reciprocally, or only one of them implies the other.

  32. When the soul acquires the scientific knowledge of something, she withdraws from unity and ceases being entirely one; for science implies discursive reason and discursive reason implies manifoldness.

  33. The name implies that it is a solution of iodin and the inference is given that it has the advantages of iodin without the disadvantages.

  34. Secondly, the wording of the advertisement implies that only the tablets stamped with “The Bayer Cross” are genuine.

  35. The quotation implies that Colalin has properties essentially different from those of bile salts, a claim which requires substantiation.

  36. The strict literal analysis of the two words implies unceasing motion.

  37. Or, all resistance from the friction of the parts of matter must be removed; which necessarily implies a change in the nature of things.

  38. The accomplishment of an endeavor implies the reaching or attainment of an ideal.

  39. The doing implies not only action, but expression.

  40. It implies that a man may be low down but that he can rise; it implies that if he begin early and work patiently enough he can control, soon or late, his nature.

  41. This exercise implies some understanding of the fundamental elements of vocal training.

  42. As breathing implies not only taking breath but giving it out, so impression and expression are necessary elements of the rhythm of life.

  43. It implies the ability to share our ideas, feelings or experiences with others.

  44. It implies enjoyment but it does not necessarily imply the gratification of low desire.

  45. An exercise implies that we can choose what we are to express.

  46. This exercise, however, implies that we should consciously and deliberately accentuate expansion and the taking of breath.

  47. It implies also the curbing of abnormal impulses.

  48. An exercise implies a struggle upward over against a drift downwards.

  49. Impression implies the conscious use of an impulse.

  50. It implies also that we can consciously regulate, guide or accentuate our mental, imaginative and emotional activities.

  51. For the above cited passage of Fredigarius, Extinctis Ducibus, in Francis denuo Reges creantur ex eadem stirpe quâ prius fuerant, implies that the kingdom continued to this new elected family during the reign of more Kings than one.

  52. In the absence of any express stipulation as to the condition of the premises, or their suitableness for the purpose for which they are to be used, the law implies nothing.

  53. The law implies certain obligations on the part of the parties to a lease.

  54. The law implies a contract on the part of the principal to a suretyship contract to pay the promisor when the latter pays the suretyship obligation.

  55. The very idea of providence, indeed, implies this.

  56. Affection always implies an object of affection, desire, an object of desire; and the object is first apprehended by the intellect before the emotion is awakened in the mind.

  57. It is of more limited application, and while it implies a desire to understand the object in view of which it is awakened, implies also some degree of wonder, at the unusual and unexpected character of the object as thus presented.

  58. Whatever we do intelligently and intentionally, whether it implies an exercise of the intellect, or of the feelings, or of both, that is an act of the will.

  59. The latter implies the former, and depends upon it.

  60. Implies a Plan, and that Plan embraces human Conduct.

  61. The term straight implies the idea of that which is not straight; beauty, the idea of deformity; greatness, its opposite; and so of others.

  62. Every proposition is, in fact, a species of synthesis, and implies the previous analysis of the conception, or comprehensive whole, whose component parts are thus brought together.

  63. Resemblance, in most cases, implies difference of objects, the opposite of identity.

  64. To speak of the association of ideas implies that they have previously coexisted in the mind, and that the one now recalls the other in consequence of that previous coexistence.

  65. The existence of these feelings always implies freedom of the will, the power to have done otherwise.

  66. The idea of cause is thus suggested to the mind, and cause implies power of one thing over another to produce given effects.

  67. Any one so slightly known as this wording implies would not be asked to fill so close a position as that of godmother without great presumption on your part.

  68. The first one, having suggested going to see the second, is bound in politeness to do so, otherwise she implies that the acquaintance on second thought seems distasteful to her.

  69. In writing for a very worthy servant therefore, it is of the utmost importance in fairness to her (or him) to put in every merit that you can think of, remembering that omission implies demerit in each trait of character not mentioned.

  70. It implies a great pother about trifles, these conscientious objectors assure us, and trifles are unimportant.

  71. Never take a man to task about anything; never ask for explanations; to do so implies too great an intimacy.

  72. Capitalistic property," he says, "has no practical value and only realises itself because it implies the exercise of indirect power over man.

  73. Matter, says Duehring, implies all that is real, therefore there is no mechanical force outside of matter.

  74. Thus the solid crust of the earth, like the water of the ocean, represents in its present form a certain quantity of heat set free which implies the same quantity of mechanical force.

  75. Force at the present day implies the army and the navy, and the two of them cost, to our sorrow, a heap of money.

  76. Slavery, to use Duehring's own elegant expression, always implies a means for supplying sustenance (using the term in its broadest sense) and never merely implies a political organization which has been developed by its own will.

  77. In all cases therefore it implies a certain power of possession which transcends the ordinary?

  78. Again, poetry implies the language of excitement; yet how to reconcile such language with God?

  79. This method implies that the teacher and pupil hold in abeyance all those probable theories, speculations, and conjectures which are not established, as irrelevant to the work in hand.

  80. A college education likewise implies the ability to express one's ideas in a clear, appropriate style.

  81. A symmetrically developed manhood or womanhood implies the training of the mind to think accurately and systematically.

  82. There are two words of similar signification in the original; one of them implies life-giving.

  83. This infliction necessarily implies a previous equality in rank and station.

  84. It implies that sense of the divine condescension which characterizes humility, intimating the unmerited nature of the mercy she had experienced, as well as her unexpected elevation from the lowest condition.

  85. The expression of Firishtah last quoted is deserving of note, as it implies that, according to tradition in his time, the Raya of Vijayanagar had by the year 1366 A.

  86. The word implies something dug out, as opposed so redoubts, which would be built up.

  87. It implies that Samgama had succeeded his father Kampa exactly a year previous to the grant.

  88. This implies that he took, when merely hunting, immense numbers of men with him.

  89. Another writer of 1710, Dr Lynn, quoted in the chapter on Smallpox, implies that physicians were taking an unusually cynical view of their business.

  90. A great deal of corn at a high value implies wages of a high value; but a great deal of corn at a low value is very consistent with wages at a low value.

  91. Thus far you will find us irreconcilable in our difference; but this very difference implies that we are agreed on the distinction which X.

  92. And, if so, the disputed doctrine is established, that a double value implies a double command of quantity; and reciprocally, that from a doubled command of quantity we may infer a doubled value.

  93. It will suffice for the service of the occasion if we say that guilt, in all its modifications, implies only a defect or a wound in the individual.

  94. The very idea of suffering implies a man in the full sense of the term.

  95. I do not mean by this to condemn farces; a farce implies between the poet and the spectator a tacit consent that no truth is to be expected in the piece.

  96. But that implies always that in our thought we attribute a will to these things that have none, and that we are struck to see it directed rigorously according to the laws of necessity.

  97. The German name implies that he is exempt from mounting guard.

  98. His condition is destroyed at the same time as his personality, because these are two correlative ideas, because change presupposes permanence, and a limited reality implies an infinite reality.

  99. But the ideal manifested in the world becomes action, and action implies a form of society, a determinate situation with collision, and an action properly so called.

  100. By the former is implied that which can be determined in general; the second implies its determination, both in a transcendental sense, abstraction being made of any difference in that which is given, and of the mode in which it is determined.

  101. Every feeling of pity implies the idea of suffering, and the degree of pity is regulated according to the degree more or less of vividness, of truth, of intensity, and of duration of this idea.

  102. The base always implies something gross, or reminds one of the mob, while the common can be found in a well-born and well-bred man, who may think and act in a common manner if he has only mediocre faculties.

  103. This sort of simplicity implies a will that is not in harmony with that which nature does of her own accord.

  104. This paradox of humility and defiance implies no good.


  105. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "implies" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.