implication
noun
im·pli·ca·tion
ˌim-plə-ˈkā-shən
1
: something implied: such as
a
: a possible significance or future effect
—usually used in plural
the book has political implications
the negative health implications of a sedentary lifestyle
b
: suggestion
I resent the implication that I'm not trying hard enough.
The shocking implication is that although humans and computers currently perceive the world in different ways, one day this perception will be essentially the same.—
The Physics arXiv Blog
2
: the act of implicating : the state of being implicated: as
a
: close connection, relationship, or involvement
… in addition to their implication in many diseases, viruses play integral parts in the evolution of novel traits in living creatures …—
Nathan Myhrvold
b
: an incriminating involvement
… all the innuendo about her first cousin Scipio Aemilianus's implication in the murder.—
Colleen McCullough
Richard Nixon announced his resignation as US president, the first to do so, because of his implication in the Watergate scandal.—
The Western Mail
3
a
: the act of implying : the state of being implied
He condemned the court and, by implication, the entire legal system.
b
logic
(1)
: a relationship between two propositions that fails to hold only if the first is true and the second is false see Truth Table
(2)
: a relationship between two propositions in which if the first is true then the second is true
(3)
: a statement exhibiting a relation of implication
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Merriam-Webster unabridged




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