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implicit in

ADJECTIVE
  1. in the nature of something though not readily apparent
    an underlying meaning
    shortcomings inherent in our approach

How To Use implicit in In A Sentence

  • Thus the various ritual capacities of North Mekeo chiefs and sorcerers typify the sort of interpersonal agency implicit in Melanesian personal partibility.
  • He knew some members of the congregation, including the president, grew restive during his discourse, and would have preferred a more oratorical, hortative style, but he felt his type of sermon was more in keeping with his basic function of teacher, implicit in the word "rabbi. Saturday the Rabbi Went Hungry
  • It has always been implicit in television that the programs are just delivery vehicles for the advertising.
  • No one can underestimate the difficulties implicit in achieving a negotiated settlement.
  • The rejection of absolutism implicit in our constitutional structure may sometimes make our politics seem unprincipled.
  • I realised, with some chagrin, that for Hilberg the conclusion was implicit in the sequence, and he had trusted me to see it.
  • Implicit in this exchange is the intimate connection of race with nationality that is inextricable from the history of the evolving concept of race.
  • Implicit in that demand is the widespread sentiment among Republicans that Democrats egregiously politicized the ethics process during the Gingrich probe.
  • Implicit in that was a threat to use violence if the bailiff went ahead.
  • Joachim anticipated a "third age" in the immediate future. This millennialism is a theme implicit in Christianity as a whole, and has generated many millennialist perspectives.
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