implied

implied — adjective

1. understood without being stated in a direct or open way — the listener or reader

1.形容詞B2
釋義

understood without being stated in a direct or open way — the listener or reader knows the meaning even though nobody said it out loud.

例句

Andre gave his implied consent by nodding instead of saying yes out loud.

implied + noun (consent) for unspoken agreement

The warning was implied in the manager's choice of words during the meeting.

同義詞
  • implicit

    slightly more formal; both mean 'understood but not stated', but 'implicit' can also mean 'complete and unquestioning'

  • unspoken

    focuses on the fact that words were not used, less formal

  • tacit

    more formal, often used in legal or professional contexts

  • understood

    more general; can refer to information known from any source, not just indirect communication

反義詞

文法句型

implied + noun

be + implied

用法筆記

This adjective is common before a noun (attributive position) such as 'implied threat' or 'implied meaning', but also works after verbs like 'be' or 'seem' — for example, 'the message was implied.'

常見錯誤

The meaning was inferred by the speaker' (confusing speaker and listener roles).
The meaning was implied by the speaker.
💡'imply' is what the speaker does; 'infer' is what the listener does.
She gave an impliedly agreement.
She gave an implied agreement.
💡'implied' is an adjective; 'impliedly' is an adverb and does not modify a noun.

implied — verb