KS: Give me a negative implication and a positive implication.
|
|
The implication is that twenty-odd of his classmates somehow received the wisdom through osmosis or implication.
|
|
Dennis Reynolds "Implication" Enamel Pin "No ones in any real danger, it's the Implication of danger" With free D.E.N.N.I.S System!
|
|
Your art exists inside a political context, and you're just saying what appeared to be the implication of your art, the implication that you choose to own.
|
|
The implication ... she's physically fit to do her thing.
|
|
So what is the implication of overcapitalized and overvalued companies?
|
|
The implication was clear, this problem is becoming an epidemic.
|
|
The implication, again, is that China is the real target.
|
|
The implication was that it's not safe to, well, eat.
|
|
"It has a bigger positive implication for BAN2401," he said.
|
|
The implication: Should Ethan come to harm for that too?
|
|
Is there a business implication to your history with them?
|
|
But how should they think, though, about the business implication?
|
|
The implication: Citron isn't in this for a fast buck.
|
|
The strong implication is that Flynn lied to the FBI.
|
|
The implication: Yes, in some cases, you might be fired.
|
|
The obvious implication for Europe would be greater fiscal discipline.
|
|
The unavoidable implication is that America has not prioritized children.
|
|
"The implication was that veterans are scary, unpredictable," he said.
|
|
That implication does not reflect reality, because family separation continues.
|
|
Trump seems to barely grasp the implication of his actions.
|
|
Again, there's a sly implication that her work is straightforward.
|
|
I mean, that was the implication of what Turkheimer wrote.
|
|
That's the implication of Biden's resounding victory in South Carolina.
|
|
My record would suffer if I declined was the implication.
|
|
Any implication that Grindr did nothing is simply not true.
|
|
The implication: You won't hear the one that kills you.
|
|
Without God, the implication goes, people have almost no agency.
|
|
The implication was clear: Aren't you tired of Amy Schumer?
|
|
There also are special cases that could have broader implication.
|
|
One implication of those historians' views was that progress toward
|
|
That has a "very interesting implication for investing," Morehead said.
|
|
The implication ... they coulda flown together, spared the air, etc.
|
|
But because you ask, I don't think this implication follows.
|
|
So by implication, Bannon was arguing for a cheaper dollar.
|
|
The implication was clear: My approval ratings are going up.
|
|
Hence any implication that Hispanics are a race is best avoided.
|
|
The implication is that being suitably feminine is rewarded with work.
|
|
And buried in that is an implication that we aren't enough.
|
|
Teacup pose and the implication that they are now therefore expendable.
|
|
The implication: surely the film industry can trust him as well.
|
|
" In other words, the implication was, "don't vote for Donald Trump.
|
|
Any implication that I left for related reasons is not true.
|
|
"Any implication to the contrary is completely false," the statement said.
|
|
The implication: Stories about women and minorities aren't seen as marketable
|
|
In Twin Peaks: The Return, there is no implication of assault.
|
|
And the implication that American manufacturing itself has declined is false.
|
|
But that may not be the biggest implication of the deal.
|
|
And it's weird to me that that has a gay implication.
|
|
The implication is that collective ideas are more important than individuals.
|
|
Obviously if there's a national security implication all bets are off.
|
|
The implication: practice didn't account for all the differences in performance.
|
|
They resent the implication that all women should support the accusers.
|
|
So I take her actions as an implication of her feelings.
|
|
But the implication was that Ms. Sugarman has ties to Gov.
|
|
Sanders picked up on Brody's biblical implication and ran with it.
|
|
The implication: they are good enough to win another national title.
|
|
One implication of quantum entanglement or quantum systems, generally, involves measurement.
|
|
So... the implication was that there was tea to be spilled.
|
|
Here we begin to enter a more fertile vineyard of implication.
|
|
The implication for our legal system goes well beyond this case.
|
|
"There&aposs an obvious implication of this for employers," Woolf said.
|
|
The implication is that she is using femininity to control men.
|
|
The implication, to be obvious, is that Trump is a big chicken.
|
|
UNINDENTIFIED MALE: His text messages would certainly leave that is the implication.
|
|
The implication is that Kyiv might somehow be involved in the hack.
|
|
By implication, you seemed to support the accusations levelled against Brett Kavanaugh.
|
|
The implication is clear, argues Paul Nightingale of the University of Sussex.
|
|
The implication: Britain already had more than enough foreign graduates hanging around.
|
|
The implication, then, might be that the comment came from a hacker.
|
|
" Adds Jenner, "The implication was obvious that he believed O.J. was guilty.
|
|
That's definitely the implication in a statement from creative director Michal Drozdowski.
|
|
The larger implication was that people could potentially "grow" soil carbon deliberately.
|
|
The implication being that romance only becomes more difficult in the spotlight.
|
|
The implication: if we are just careful enough, we can protect ourselves.
|
|
He declined to name the NSA specifically, but the implication was clear.
|
|
They should thank him, but the implication is that they will not.
|
|
I liked the implication that masturbation could be that baroque, that impractical.
|
|
That's an implication from recent comments that she made to Vogue magazine.
|
|
He valued the democratic process over the historic implication of criminal charges.
|
|
But that is the White-House-led implication now dogging Trump's victory.
|
|
The implication is that his agency is likely view such behavior favorably.
|
|
The most agonizing implication of the narrow loss is that everything mattered.
|
|
It is not an implication of hard work; it is physical evidence.
|
|
Claire is a fascinating character, sometimes by design and sometimes by implication.
|
|
The implication: Her professional achievements are as notable as her personal ones.
|
|
Todd VanDerWerff: Green Book is mostly a movie about racism by implication.
|
|
The implication is that countering an ideology is somehow a military mission.
|
|
The implication is that Ford, not Kavanaugh, is the one on trial.
|
|
" Mr. Drennan, Mr. Ali's lawyer, criticized the "implication he was hiding something.
|
|
The implication is that she's staying to rescue her older daughter, Hannah.
|
|
"The parents were informed of the implication of this," Dr. He said.
|
|
One implication is that the comparisons that matter most are highly local.
|
|
The implication of this finding is as startling as it is clear.
|
|
Sondland responded by saying he resented the implication, causing Maloney to interject.
|
|
The implication, of course, was that Gerald looked like a desperate child.
|
|
The implication was that the new Trump administration would not follow through.
|
|
The implication is that the top United States team won't be missed.
|
|
The implication here is that user error led to his untimely death.
|
|
But there's a bigger, and perhaps more worrying, implication of this research.
|
|
He questioned Trump's grasp of the policy and — by implication — his competence.
|
|
Warren's green-military plan is that it is practical, and, by implication,
|
|
But the implication was that Stone lied to Congress on Trump's behalf.
|
|
But the words he preaches to his followers go well beyond implication.
|
|
McKelley rejected the implication that the goal is to eliminate male characteristics.
|
|
But I still think the strong implication of the scene is rape.
|
|
The implication, of course, is that Cuomo is mired in the muck.
|
|
There's almost an implication here that the iPhone X isn't built to last.
|
|
The implication: Ideology, not experience, is what matters most in the White House.
|
|
The implication is that keeping equity investors happy is a company's main priority.
|
|
The implication is that anybody tagged in this has to validate their viewpoint.
|
|
The implication is that there is serious regional interest in venture capital investment.
|
|
Republicans dismissed this concern, and bridled at the implication about their underlying intent.
|
|
The implication ... a majority of the media has been biased against Donald Trump.
|
|
That's also the implication of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons's original Watchmen comic.
|
|
The clear implication is that some indirect role for the court is acceptable.
|
|
The mention of hanging and implication of murder should never, ever be acceptable.
|
|
Second, the term carries an underlying implication about health, or at least fitness.
|
|
Was the implication really that we were going to make a shitty record?
|
|
His implication, however, that a shrinking middle class caused that number is misleading.
|
|
The implication is pretty clear ... he's married, but he's also Sophie's sugar daddy.
|
|
The new ad does not mention Mr. Sanders but the implication is clear.
|
|
The episode ends with the staggering implication that Red has been sold out.
|
|
The implication is that that Lundgren is not a legitimate refurbisher or recycler.
|
|
A related concern is the social aspect and implication of the returning travelers.
|
|
The implication: The ongoing Mueller investigation roiling his presidency is actually Sessions's fault.
|
|
I slowly realized that the positive implication of this nomination was being retracted.
|
|
The implication, that the refugee crisis was an ISIS plot, wasn't especially subtle.
|
|
The implication was subtle but clear: Trump was nobody's man but his own.
|
|
"He is just reflexively against anything that has any international implication," Clinton said.
|
|
And the implication, everyone knows, is that not obeying could get you shot.
|
|
The statement did not explicitly name Saudi Arabia, but the implication was clear.
|
|
Their implication was they were supposed to help you clean up your feed.
|
|
The implication seemed clear: The election had been decided by working-class whites.
|
|
The implication seems obvious: While triadic populism is pernicious, dyadic populism is benign.
|
|
Since his implication in the abuse crisis, however, Wuerl's days have been numbered.
|
|
Obama's letter, by implication, asked President Trump to think twice before doing it.
|
|
The longer they are out of work, the financial implication can be devastating.
|
|
The implication here is that distinctly American interests linger somewhere in the background.
|
|
The implication obviously being that Nelson is a relic of a bygone era.
|
|
The implication is that Jesus would have thought such programs were a waste.
|
|
The implication was that I, being transgender, wouldn't be able to save myself.
|
|
The implication was not so much I received this as I did this .
|
|
"The Study of Poetry," Matthew Arnold saddled poetry, and by implication all of
|
|
The implication is that big players on both sides are hungry for money.
|
|
Interestingly, though, Rousseff herself was cleared of personal implication in the Petrobras scandal.
|
|
The implication: Where are these guys getting the money to buy designer goods?
|
|
The idea of a dynasty, a legacy, is the implication of earth's future.
|
|
"The implication is that their revenue guidance looks far too conservative," they wrote.
|
|
The implication seems to be that they might not have done so otherwise.
|
|
The implication: Truly white hair is not quite human or of this world.
|
|
By implication, Ms. Veselnitskaya, said, those political contributions were tainted by "stolen" money.
|
|
But this fact has almost no implication for how to stop them. Why?
|
|
The implication is that there's no situation a gun doesn't make more dangerous.
|
|
The implication was that Rich's killing was punishment for leaking damaging internal emails.
|
|
Often the implication is that these women are bad because they are older.
|
|
My interest here is the implication for the future of the Roberts court.
|
|
Shaikh: You need to show beyond a reasonable doubt, not just by implication.
|
|
His implication that the Kurds were fighting only for money is patently untrue.
|
|
If other studies support that, the implication is potentially huge for cancer patients.
|
|
White House officials reject any implication that the policies are motivated by intolerance.
|
|
BUT I THINK IT'LL HAVE BIGGER SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS AND A BIGGER INTERNATIONAL IMPLICATION.
|
|
What's strikingly absent, except by unpleasant implication, is Rockwell's most durable theme: community.
|
|
His implication: that snow was water now, and it was heading our way.
|
|
The motion did not name Huawei or China but the implication was clear.
|
|
That is the implication, at least, of a batch of recent psychological studies.
|
|
Goldman firmly pushed back against Collins's comments, asking him what his "implication" was.
|
|
He said his chief financial officer questioned what the financial implication would be.
|
|
She simply should not have been granted a waiver, because of the implication.
|
|
The implication of a baton having been passed is ahistorical, and very silly.
|
|
Yet it's hard to ignore the underlying implication: that my identity is invalid.
|
|
The unavoidable implication is that more people would end up without health insurance.
|
|
The implication: Lose faith in the Crown Prince and lose all those benefits.
|
|
The implication — that the refugee crisis was an ISIS plot — wasn't especially subtle.
|
|
But they resist the implication that anyone with a brain should support Sanders.
|
|
The implication and long-term consequences of this failure are only now becoming clear.
|
|
The implication that Trump allies are drawing from this is a bit more dubious.
|
|
The implication is that a successful amendment would dramatically benefit Democrats throughout the state.
|
|
The implication: She should make sure he gets enough food, and he'll be fine.
|
|
Lawmakers have raised concerns about its implication for financial markets, cybercrime and consumer privacy.
|
|
The implication was that the evidence against Trump on obstruction shouldn't be dismissed lightly.
|
|
The long-term implication is you just don't know where the bottom is at.
|
|
Meloche rejects the implication that Cherry Hill is an example of the national issue.
|
|
The episode has drummed up controversy because of its implication that spiders are harmless.
|
|
The implication is that a future Gilmore girl will be seeking for her father.
|
|
That's the startling implication of a new study in mice, published in PLOS Genetics.
|
|
But the implication of Trump's tweets is, presumably, that something illegal went down here.
|
|
In 1993, there was no implication that the firing of William Sessions was improper.
|
|
That, more than domestic political matters, is the most significant implication of today's news.
|
|
The implication is that the system does not recognize the true interests of society.
|
|
Clay's face, however, remains hanging in the dark room, and the implication is chilling.
|
|
The implication, presumably, is that antibiotic tolerance will not result from eating those nuggets.
|
|
The unspoken implication is that Constand didn't want justice — she just wanted the money.
|
|
The implication was that if white liberals left their bubble, they'd start voting Republican.
|
|
The implication is that gun-friendly candidate Bernie Sanders might not earn Obama's endorsement.
|
|
The implication was clear: those who want to be promoted should do more promoting.
|
|
But there's a much more immediate implication, and it should excite Anthony Hopkins fans.
|
|
The broader, unstated implication is that the entire Russia investigation is tainted by partisanship.
|
|
Navarro sought to tamp down the implication that Trump was looking for widespread restrictions.
|
|
The implication is that an Asian-American is somehow foreign and not quite American.
|
|
Whatever its name, the implication is that people are paying much more somewhere else.
|
|
The implication is that Lillard can swing a game with his beautiful ridiculousness, too.
|
|
Ellis told Mueller's team not to give jurors the implication that oligarchs were criminals.
|
|
The implication from my friend who tagged me was that I should do something.
|
|
What's beautiful about Toy Story 2 is how these themes develop mostly by implication.
|
|
And as Steven Perlstein has argued, this has an important implication for government policy.
|
|
The implication was that his change in attire signified assimilation into the political establishment.
|
|
"Too Late to Die Young" is above all an achievement in mood and implication.
|
|
The implication is that the help is there, just waiting to be sought out.
|
|
That's the implication of two new studies published in the journal BMJ Quality & Safety.
|
|
"Maybe being a little more cautious and kind could be one implication," he said.
|
|
The obvious implication, Dr. O'Connor said, is that they have particularly tough immune systems.
|
|
The dangerous implication is that PrEP alone may ward off all sexually transmitted infections.
|
|
My problem is the implication that progress is automatic, which it most certainly isn't.
|
|
The implication is that Aristophil, and its many investors, were ruined out of pique.
|
|
Among a younger, savvier audience, the implication of sex wasn't subversive; it was hackneyed.
|
|
I asked Kashmir what she thought the most important implication of her story was.
|
|
An aside: One implication of these developments is that William Julius Wilson was right.
|
|
Or is the implication here that the prospects for thriving have now been cut?
|
|
Indeed, there could not have been a citation because there was no such implication.
|
|
Goldman pushed back strongly against Collins's comments, asking him what his "implication" was. Rep.
|
|
There's an implication of mental illness, and he's not completely sure what he saw.
|
|
Rothenberg declined to comment on the investigation, charges or implication of other union leaders.
|
|
The implication is that more of his armor is going to be coming off.
|
|
The most obvious implication for the rest of the Fantastic Beasts series is thematic.
|
|
The implication is a rhetorical question: What's Etsy really going to do to Amazon?
|
|
The implication was clear: They are coming, and they are coming to kill us.
|
|
The implication that we need that unity more than ever rings loud and clear.
|
|
This line of research has a sad and illuminating implication for lottery ticket purchasers.
|
|
The implication is that some of the Carson votes ended up going to Mr. Cruz.
|
|
Executives fear the exit will do no good to America's—and by implication their—reputation.
|
|
The name of HomeAway's chief rival, Airbnb, is never mentioned, but the implication is clear.
|
|
His parents are unhappy with the implication that their son, 22, leads an extravagant life.
|
|
There was the implication that I was a liar, that I was a promiscuous teenager.
|
|
Rolling Stone spokeswoman Kathryn Brenner called defamation by implication a "critical element" of the suit.
|
|
In clear, elegant prose it makes large claims in metaphysics, morals and, by implication, politics.
|
|
The implication is that Mr Obama somehow engineered the economic recovery towards people of colour.
|
|
The implication was that this would continue into the fourth quarter and possibly into 2020.
|
|
The clear implication of these studies is that emotional memory is not permanent after all.
|
|
The implication has been that to keep the first may require concessions on the second.
|
|
The implication of Lindelof's work is clear: A story changes based on who's telling it.
|
|
"I slowly realized that the positive implication of this nomination was being retracted," she wrote.
|
|
Gay-rights groups decried the implication that homosexuality was both a disease and a slur.
|
|
Is there an implication that it's inevitable for us to inflict violence on each other?
|
|
What people really need to do is to start listening to us, is the implication.
|
|
The clear implication, which may remain unspoken, is that the emperor desires to step down.
|
|
The implication was that viewers should buy Samsung's Galaxy phones, which still had the feature.
|
|
The implication, of course, was that they should challenge anyone who appeared to be unqualified.
|
|
The implication was always that connecting people is good so connecting more people is better.
|
|
The implication is that they are slowing down other (male) travelers with less fussy baggage.
|
|
This initial governmental concern for others, which sounds compassionate, carries with it a moral implication.
|
|
"It will pick up momentum when it has an implication for the pricing," he said.
|
|
The clear implication is that the KGB was engaged with the Trumps for 3 decades.
|
|
"The implication is that they don't experience pain in the same way," Dr. Pilgrim said.
|
|
The implication is that he picked up that skill while working in a darker trade.
|
|
And I blame it on the 24 hour news cycle, and by implication the consumer.
|
|
The implication is that stimulation of the innate immune system is critical to preventing asthma.
|
|
" And then, by implication, "What a terrible thing the lack of liberty in France is.
|
|
Though whether the implication was that said women deserve comfort or provide it was unclear.
|
|
Except remains a mirage, enticing the imagination with suggestion and implication, but never feeding it.
|
|
This report of miniaturization goes a long way toward confirming that implication beyond a doubt.
|
|
The implication is clear — many Americans know more about celebs' personal lives than current events.
|
|
I like the build up… the implication that there's something sexual to follow is enough.
|
|
The danger is in its abstract implication that the root of maleness is sexual possession.
|
|
Williams was offended by the implication that she was cheating, and she demanded an apology.
|
|
While God is not explicitly identified as the designer, the implication is hard to miss.
|
|
There's the implication that it has an American theme because it's red, white and blue.
|
|
The cynical, partisan implication of Trump's comments is that elected officials like Baltimore-area Rep.
|
|
The second problem is the implication that there is one calling out there for everyone.
|
|
One obvious implication of this view is that only one's own tribe can be trusted.
|
|
The sound they have built for her is sparse with instrumentation and large with implication.
|
|
Every encounter is full of implication and innuendo, every character a collection of mixed signals.
|
|
Overall, there's an underlying implication that the lives of drug users are not worth saving.
|
|
The implication is that this is bad news both for the restaurant industry and Deliveroo.
|
|
The implication is that for-profit facilities may be biased toward keeping patients on dialysis.
|
|
The clear implication of this study is that emotion raises norepinephrine, which then strengthens memory.
|
|
His distaste for nation building, with its implication of a long-term commitment, is understandable.
|
|
It is the seemingly inevitable implication for the culture of the commercial banking institutions involved.
|
|
The implication being -- we think -- is that women are exponentially affected by their children's fates.
|
|
" Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley Grassley brushed off Cohen's implication of the President as "speculation.
|
|
He chafes at the implication he doesn't represent Alabama values because he's an unabashed Democrat.
|
|
The implication is that treatments designed to clear the brain of amyloid could be detrimental.
|
|
It is the most real thing in the painting and, by implication, in her world.
|
|
The implication is that once numbers fall below a certain level, genetic decline is irreversible.
|
|
So, the implication is that the MCAS fault has similar symptoms to that classic fault.
|
|
Throughout the day, Sondland's testimony was compared to Dean's 1973 implication of President Richard Nixon.
|
|
The implication was that he would leave middle-class jobs prey to globalization and corporations.
|
|
One other implication is that of the attractiveness of the dollar as a funding currency.
|
|
That brings us to the most important implication of the news of the Manafort raid.
|
|
The implication is that the previous administration sought to cast blame on the opposite party.
|
|
Here is a man, the implication throbs, who does not want to fuck Liz Taylor.
|
|
And, again, former task force employees recoiled at Sopko's implication that the money was wasted.
|
|
But the implication that I look so much older than her has rankled for years.
|
|
One implication is that the tide may be turning on 14(c) and sheltered workshops.
|
|
The other implication is that Cambridge Analytica may not have destroyed that data back in 2015.
|
|
The implication is that we should vote for Hillary Clinton because she could get that cooperation.
|
|
Becerra's implication that he might be under consideration for the role comes days after Massachusetts Sen.
|
|
The absolute numbers might be the same, but the implication and the story are vastly different.
|
|
"Any implication that that these four people quit is wrong," one senior State Department official said.
|
|
The study has a more general implication: Disease eradication may not always be what it seems.
|
|
The implication is clear: Ceaya is a troll, and the director of Overwatch called it out.
|
|
The implication, according to classmates, is that these boys had romantic or sexual relations with Schroeder.
|
|
"The piece that people maybe want to look at is implication[s] for Pepsi," Zuanic said.
|
|
The implication is clear: the tools might be sleeker, but they're still wielded by human beings.
|
|
Just as on the demand side, however, the hypothetical post-Brexit implication is far from clear.
|
|
Cardi didn't like the implication, and said Offset embraces all of his children ... end of story.
|
|
The implication of drawing those parallels is that Tesla's declines have only just begun, Cramer said.
|
|
According to grand-slam rules, an implication of dishonesty qualifies as verbal abuse—another code violation.
|
|
Despite her desire for implication, and tendency to stress participation, Piper is also a famous refuser.
|
|
There was a business implication when they wouldn't give us any footage for the HBO show.
|
|
"From a stock investment implication, I don't think there'll be any immediate change," Vertium's Teh said.
|
|
The implication for athletes and coaches is to set lots of different achievable goals, he says.
|
|
The implication was that even the limited use of force could trigger a Pakistani nuclear response.
|
|
"The implication is, a bunch of other tanks could fail in this same manner," Carpenter said.
|
|
If you don't get the job, the implication is that there's another job you would get.
|
|
But the implication of the episode is clear: The old systems, which devalued women, have failed.
|
|
Of course, the sexual implication is something he'd be praised for, while the woman is attacked.
|
|
The implication that the people who read Elle need to be "tricked" into caring about politics.
|
|
Even if it is true, doesn&apost mean from Dershowitz and Sol Wisenberg, no criminal implication.
|
|
The suspicious campaign contacts, by Papadopoulos and Flynn, stop short of any implication of active cooperation.
|
|
Or, more precisely, that's the implication, if we're assuming "privilege" is something that should be eradicated.
|
|
So this implication of any insincerity out of her mouth about me really boils my blood.
|
|
Share prices of most Samsung companies showed muted reaction to Lee's implication in the scandal, however.
|
|
Women's rights group, Fawcett Society, said the implication that only mothers can sew was old-fashioned.
|
|
The implication being that the country has been burning through its reserves to stabilize its currency.
|
|
Please pardon me if, after such confusion, I cannot hear sly self-implication in the chorus.
|
|
"Any implication or lead that would indicate Russian involvement, we'll investigate that lead," the official said.
|
|
The implication is that the private sector can deliver on the nation's future basic research needs.
|
|
The implication was that a public option might be more affordable than the current private options.
|
|
The implication is that for constitutional reasons, patents on common email antivirus software should be invalidated.
|
|
We don't have the patience or the wherewithal to consider every implication, every idea, every angle.
|
|
The implication was clear: this show, heralded by panicky press releases from politicians, was incendiary stuff.
|
|
George Romney and Jack Kemp, past Republican HUD secretaries, acknowledged that second implication of the law.
|
|
Heller's implication was that being open-minded about options for Yucca Mountain equals being a Democrat.
|
|
The NWHL is not the only league grappling with the implication of the upcoming Winter Games.
|
|
The bad news is the implication that Chinese producers are sitting on unsold stocks of tin.
|
|
The implication is that "all other citizen-members" believe that universal birthright citizenship threatens the polity.
|
|
The implication was that adding the tactile dimension would make everything else seem primitive by comparison.
|
|
"Milo made this implication that I'm just in there to check out women," Kramer tells Broadly.
|
|
The underlying implication is that the next administration could choose to cancel NASA's Journey to Mars.
|
|
The implication was clear: Seoul wants to engage Pyongyang, but Washington has gotten in the way.
|
|
CN: Right, and the implication of that is no one deserves to be fired over this.
|
|
The president has the constitutional authority to appoint and, by implication, fire those folks at will.
|
|
It seems nowadays that the only way athletes can improve is with the implication of technology.
|
|
That question, which has begun to emerge in other courts, is fraught with complexity and implication.
|
|
But this new set of interactive maps lays out another clear implication: It's also about race.
|
|
The implication ... it opens the door for Stephen to see his 6-year-old daughter Madison.
|
|
CMA-CGM's direct implication in the installation calls the critical dimensions of the artwork into question.
|
|
The implication is clear: This exhibition is Mr. Anderson and Ms. Malouf's own cabinet of curiosities.
|
|
Rather, it is by implication that Albee tries to establish whiteness, through social and class context.
|
|
I think the previous version that got cut had a different implication because it was funny.
|
|
But its implication is to say to everyone in travel, hospitality, retail, restaurants, nightlive, events, etc.
|
|
Some deaf people bristled at the implication that they needed to be "fixed" with an implant.
|
|
He looked at me with surprise; the implication was that this was not his first rodeo.
|
|
Though Ms. Slaughter denies the connection between Google's funding and her decision, the implication seems clear.
|
|
But her voice is dismissive, and her implication is clear: You can ask anything you want.
|
|
The implication of Yellen's view was that more job gains were not only possible, but desirable.
|
|
The implication, I think, is that the mother of the bride needs to be made docile.
|
|
The implication from Hugh is that this Queen's Cell is in a hiding spot of sorts.
|
|
Ms. Swift has in court papers rejected the implication she was mistaken about who groped her.
|
|
The following are some key points about the scandal and its implication: WHAT IS THE SCANDAL?
|
|
The implication is that Chuck has finally come to believe that his issue is, indeed, mental.
|
|
The implication of this blunted reward circuit is that they find normal food consumption insufficiently rewarding.
|
|
By implication, this would have to be more severe than the global shock of 2008-2009.
|
|
I don&apost appreciate what you have said about single mothers, and by implication my family.
|
|
Love stories with real romantic oomph are for commercial genres like romance, is the going implication.
|
|
These sentiments have a direct implication for counselors, said Bob Filbin, the organization's chief data scientist.
|
|
Both "Exhibit b" and excerpts from "vickie" explore conflicts, including, by implication, those of modern Israel.
|
|
" The implication being that he, Mr. Lagerfeld, did not think so — because "I know Gilles Deleuze.
|
|
And the film's chilling implication certainly outlived the 18th century: Be careful when you're chasing power.
|
|
In Schumer's case, there's obviously the implication that her work isn't original, which is bad enough.
|
|
The implication to me, at first, seemed clear: Zombie Gregor was going to rape Septa Unella.
|
|
But the implication is there for anyone who supports him to read into if they wish.
|
|
The implication is that wiser authority figures should dictate what these families should and can eat.
|
|
The second implication is that Britain needs a debate about the balance between public services and taxes.
|
|
What's more, the FTC resented the implication of the takeover that internet providers had been inadequately regulated.
|
|
But the biggest implication may be balding men giving up on products promising to reverse hair loss.
|
|
Stabenow took umbrage with the implication that she was sleeping, and she delivered a perfectly fiery reply.
|
|
"The clear implication of that is maybe we should be applying tariffs on their products," Kumar said.
|
|
Eramo also failed to provide evidence that Rolling Stone intended to defame her by implication, Conrad said.
|
|
Long enough, the implication was, that no plaintiff's memory, no matter how compelling, could ever be reliable.
|
|
All these things give her power, and the implication is that power makes her a good queen.
|
|
The implication he's making is clear: She's famous only because he chose to see her as beautiful.
|
|
The implication is that modern humans are likely to have a messier genetic heritage than once thought.
|
|
The implication is that there's a lot more to come, a potential franchise waiting in the wings.
|
|
The implication is clear: The economy broke at a certain point, and now workers are getting screwed.
|
|
The implication for the dollar of these "twin deficits" is ambiguous, says Zach Pandl of Goldman Sachs.
|
|
While they did not change their earnings estimate, the implication is that earnings could clearly go higher.
|
|
The implication is that Iran wanted to remove any evidence that could link them to the attack.
|
|
The implication: People from predominantly black countries are bad, while people from predominantly white countries are good.
|
|
For example, despite the implication that he deserted his daughters, they never felt he had abandoned them.
|
|
And the "we," by implication, can only be white American diners befuddled—or delighted—by this influx.
|
|
He did not name the five boys, then suspected of the crime, but the implication was clear.
|
|
Cyber officials likely don't appreciate the implication their top leader is naive and slow-witted like Pooh.
|
|
The implication was obvious: By analyzing where other stars went wrong, Anderson could avoid a similar fate.
|
|
"The big implication is that maybe we don't understand how the terrestrial planets have evolved," said Watters.
|
|
Some global banks were also arranging calls with their analysts to discuss the implication of the vote.
|
|
"If we do get into a trade war, the implication remains moderately higher USD/CNY," said Tan.
|
|
The implication, Corbell's film hints, is that the government was trying to spook Lazar back into silence.
|
|
That last notion was littered throughout the episode, and the first implication of that is with Hakeem.
|
|
The implication is that the dispute must be settled before it will spend big money on exploration.
|
|
But the deeper implication—that the president is pressuring the attorney general to act unethically—is inescapable.
|
|
"Your decision has a major implication both in this courtroom and outside it," he told the jury.
|
|
The other implication in Bryan and Matt's comments is that Dean doesn't have to settle down, yet.
|
|
In my selfies, I prefer the implication of nudity and never show my face and body simultaneously.
|
|
There is, to be clear, no accusation or implication in the story -- or here -- of any impropriety.
|
|
The implication was that where the government has failed vets, rich people were stepping in, including himself.
|
|
"Every stop he made had not the slightest implication of any racial implications," attorney Andy Savage said.
|
|
The implication seems to be that credit cards are intrinsically negative instruments that compel irresponsible financial choices.
|
|
"The implication is that retail prices are becoming less insulated from these common nationwide shocks," Cavallo writes.
|
|
Now by implication, so is Vetements, vaulted from the underground fringes to the center of the establishment.
|
|
I think that's the implication of these statistics, that they tell you where to put your efforts.
|
|
Any implication that egg freezing guarantees women the ability to have children in the future is disingenuous.
|
|
Besides the implication that the Clinton team had worked to protect Mr. Obama, the messages about Mrs.
|
|
The implication appears to be that, because of these motives, there is no case to impeach Trump.
|
|
Many conservatives see such coverage as just another opportunity for the media to condemn Trump by implication.
|
|
"Themes of O.C.D. have no absolutely no implication about the character of a person," Dr. Phillipson said.
|
|
What young people seem to find galling is the implication that they've had any choice in this.
|
|
The obvious pandering and implication the law would allow anti-LGBTQ discrimination led to a national firestorm.
|
|
The implication is clear enough: Google and the other tech titans understand that the landscape is shifting.
|
|
The movie's implication that the untenable conditions are just "the way it is" is complacent at best.
|
|
Presidential discretion But the broader implication — that he'd take the reins off banks — is a wild card.
|
|
"I did not like the implication that doctors would get rewarded when they really aren't," she said.
|
|
The implication is clear: These people are minor players in a drama they have little control over.
|
|
Because what Kelly said was not only accurate, it was said with zero malice or racial implication.
|
|
He spotted Mr. Sanders stewing at the implication that those radical changes were not what people wanted.
|
|
Kevin Riley, editor at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution tells PEOPLE there's "no evidence" to support the implication.
|
|
The implication is that investors believe Goldman can push its return on equity well into double digits.
|
|
The second implication is that sanctions are a necessary but clearly insufficient condition for changing Tehran's calculus.
|
|
But it also has a very different implication: Moderates worried about a radical presidency should cool it.
|
|
The implication of his argument, in my view, is a more flexible but more populist Democratic Party.
|
|
" As for the president's implication that the midterms were rigged, Cuomo said, "this is full Alex Jones.
|
|
The implication: An attacker would theoretically have an easier time hacking a 5G network over older networks.
|
|
The implication is that with all the exercise these athletes do, they can eat whatever they want.
|
|
The implication, of course, is that maybe voice-based computing isn't such a great opportunity after all.
|
|
There was the implication that Jackson assaulted Olympios, although investigation into the incident found no evidence of misconduct.
|
|
There's a policy implication: government reporting requirements should penalize physicians for reckless behavior, but not honest human errors.
|
|
His reaction should chill every American with its implication: A President Trump may well try to suppress speech.
|
|
But think about the implication of that: Your phone knows you so well it can correct your mistakes.
|
|
The implication is that it's expected that one should take a side in the face of such information.
|
|
The implication is that Medicare will change dramatically for the people who currently rely on it for care.
|
|
Ostensibly, the implication here is he would stop at nothing to meet those milestones, even appropriating trade secrets.
|
|
The implication then, is that the Trump administration will enforce immigration laws more aggressively than previous administrations have.
|
|
It's as if the very implication of racial insensitivity is worse than any offense itself could ever be.
|
|
And the implication that the investigation that unearthed this striking fact has also revealed "ethics challenges" is important.
|
|
"It would have a significant cost implication if they were to reclassify their drivers as employees," says Rowland.
|
|
They felt violated and surveilled, he said, but he shrugged off any implication that it was his fault.
|
|
The implication that women are hard to work with is a pervasive stereotype that is holding Hollywood back.
|
|
" He continues, "The implication of that question is that the show isn't good enough in its present position.
|
|
The implication is that Lyanna Stark and Rhaegar Targaryen had a child, an heir to the Iron Throne.
|
|
" The blocks are currently operated by BP, which has said it "rejects any implication that it acted improperly.
|
|
The team reckons that understanding more about them could have implication for the treatment of depression and schizophrenia.
|
|
"Many investors are now justifiably concerned about the inverted yield curve and the implication this has for growth."
|
|
" He continued, "The implication of that question is that the show isn't good enough in its present position.
|
|
Waymo CEO John Krafcik wouldn't reveal much, but the implication is that a deal should be announced soon.
|
|
The implication of the Atlantic article, however, is that the government of Vietnam is yielding to Trump's pressure.
|
|
The implication here is that future smartphones may finally be that slab of glass we've been dreaming about.
|
|
This has the important implication of permitting to simplify operational procedures, and in particular the critical initial steps.
|
|
The implication was the FDD was somehow colluding with the UAE, or even taking funds from the country.
|
|
The implication, presumably, is that Clinton wanted the debates scheduled on a night when no one was watching.
|
|
The implication here is that equality and justice are only good ideas when they come from white people.
|
|
A timeless GIF has an implication of mystery, or even mythos Which brings us to the math wall.
|
|
The implication seemed to be that women in burkinis are un-French, while true French women go topless.
|
|
The implication of these parallel trauma narratives is that Dolores will find answers, and Maeve will seek revenge.
|
|
The implication is that awareness empowers us to change how we perceive, experience, and act on our emotions.
|
|
The implication is the elected President has to meet a standard, but the unelected government official does not.
|
|
The president's instincts recognize much of this in the individual parts while missing the implication of the whole.
|
|
He never used the phrase "one nation" himself, but that was the clear implication of his political thinking.
|
|
The implication that Daenerys Targaryen is going mad is the greatest fraud Game of Thrones has ever perpetrated.
|
|
Mirroring this insult to teen girls' experience is the implication that adult women cannot ever become full adults.
|
|
His intervention has already soured relations with Italy, which smarts at the implication that it is not trustworthy.
|
|
Some critics have called the show dutiful, with the implication that it is not especially interesting as art.
|
|
"If there's any earnings implication within third-quarter results, it would have to be credit-related," said Shanahan.
|
|
His implication was that this very senior elected official was in no way the candidate for these times.
|
|
The implication in all this was that even Israel's former adversaries were in agreement: Palestinians were the exception.
|
|
The implication of the hash-taggable name was clear: citizens can use guns to "remedy" perceived political problems.
|
|
The campiness of the '60s, the insanity of the '70s, and the philosophical implication of the modern era.
|
|
The implication is clear: Kim Jong-un, like his father, is preoccupied with projecting force in the region.
|
|
The second is subtler: the strong implication that the happy ending of heterosexual marriage and procreation excuses transgression.
|
|
Because that's how they would see it, as a shameful implication, that they had somehow done something wrong.
|
|
Okay, but this is something you've done by implication, more or less every time you've touched this topic.
|
|
The implication of being honest about genetics is not that we focus on the intrinsic differences between groups.
|
|
In Savage's case, there's the implication that repenting means he should suffer no further consequences for his actions.
|
|
The implication is that the microgravity environment is having some sort of effect on the body's metabolic processes.
|
|
The implication is that every journey — no matter how strange it may seem to some people — has meaning.
|
|
The implication that people took from that was Dove implied that using its products will make you whiter.
|
|
The implication is that companies may not hire as much if they are locked into union wage contracts.
|
|
It was more a form of penance for his implication in the pay-to-play Keating Five scandal.
|
|
While normal political language functions through implication and indirection, Mr. Trump luxuriates in saying the quiet part loud.
|
|
The implication on the campaign trail was always "something simple like cutting a check," she said on Twitter.
|
|
" The blocks are currently operated by BP, which has said it "rejects any implication that it acted improperly.
|
|
But the larger implication was that by embracing her blackness, Beyoncé was no longer trading in generic pop.
|
|
But his totemic figures built from half-recognizable insignia and symbols pulse with narrative implication, relationships and innuendo.
|
|
This implication is surely not lost on Ryan: His party controls the House, Senate, and the Oval Office.
|
|
And who can forget the Time magazine breast-feeding cover asking if you are "Mom Enough" (Implication: No).
|
|
The online samples that fared well raise some concerns about the other online pollsters, if only by implication.
|
|
He is not a sex toy, but the implication is that he'd be amenable, if that's your thing.
|
|
The implication is that these two kids will be in Blanca and Pray's lives for years to come.
|
|
"There was never any implication that he was the one overseeing any of the problems," Mr. Borelli said.
|
|
And the implication is that if it hadn't been the cassette tape, it would have been something else.
|
|
The most stunning outcome of Tuesday's legal proceedings was Mr. Cohen's implication of the president in a crime.
|
|
"The implication is that retail prices are becoming less 'insulated' from these common nationwide shocks," Mr. Cavallo wrote.
|
|
Certainly, Hendrix's implication that at Bonhoeffer's execution, he met his God is more emotionally powerful than strictly verifiable.
|
|
The implication seems to be, if only people had paid attention, the carnage somehow could have been prevented.
|
|
The implication of his attacks has been that he wanted a loyalist in charge of the Justice Department.
|
|
The implication is that we stopped being citizens at some point, or simply lost faith in our institutions.
|
|
But there is a crucial implication of the LTG model that is often overlooked: what happens during collapse.
|
|
The implication is that if his love story isn't real, his plans for the country lack substance, too.
|
|
But what unsettles me most about the 40s is the implication that I'm now a grown-up myself.
|
|
The implication appears to be that free Wi-Fi programs are less necessary now than they once were.
|
|
Looking forward, the implication is crystal clear: job growth is poised to slow further in the coming months.
|
|
Sanders senior adviser Jeff Weaver pushed back on the ad's implication that Sanders was endorsed by the NRA.
|
|
The first implication is that weakness was, is, and remains provocative — especially when it's weakness masked in bluster.
|
|
The implication was that because Sessions has a deep southern accent, he is somehow flawed or less intelligent.
|
|
Still, it's easy to understand why some Canadians might take offense to the implication in the Times tweet.
|
|
One implication, if I'm right, is that electability should play a very important role in your current preferences.
|
|
The implication is clear: The ACA failed to bring the affordable care it promised to its intended beneficiaries.
|
|
And if some of the writing was overheated or extreme in advancing that view, I regret that implication.
|
|
U.S. and European shares cheered the jobs figures' implication that the Fed may wait until December to act.
|
|
The rape of a woman, or its implication, has long been used as an inciting incident in film.
|
|
The idea that we are the ones who are doing the time-traveling doesn't carry the same implication.
|
|
Which is not to say that Mr. Dunne, a very canny filmmaker, doesn't accomplish a lot via implication.
|
|
All of it came with the implication that Ms. Markle was an unlikely candidate to be taken seriously.
|
|
United Nations evidence of Anvil's implication in the massacre has not been made public by the World Bank.
|
|
The implication, of course, if I did not feel that way, was that I was a bad mother.
|
|
The implication is that Bardav's "board" of two people evaporated when Barbara sold her half of the company.
|
|
Looking at the substance, the implication that you need fossil fuels to turn on lights is also false.
|
|
Participants are asked, "What was capitalism?" with the implication that these stories will be preserved for future generations.
|
|
The implication is almost that we shouldn't be working to alter the very things that perpetuate human misery.
|
|
" The implication, he said, is that "natural selection has been hugely concerned with minimizing the thermodynamic cost of computation.
|
|
The unfortunate implication is, however, that almost all the taxable value of illegal immigrants is lost at the border.
|
|
Instead, it solved many of those questions by implication, choosing to focus on the end of the characters' journeys.
|
|
"That carries a clear implication that something is wrong inside my head, that I'm insane," Ramos told the judge.
|
|
The not so subtle implication: keep this posture and your own party isn't going to defend the White House.
|
|
The implication seems to be that Busch entered the country legally, or "the right way," as some would say.
|
|
We don't see what happens in the barn, but the implication of sexual violence makes the scene extremely upsetting.
|
|
He's not about to fall for their implication that he has some patriotic duty to sell them Nootka Sound.
|
|
Beyond the immediate impact of this fall's elections, the decision could have a far reaching implication on Virginia politics.
|
|
In 2019, Stephanie Carter described this picture as "misleading" in its implication of inappropriate contact between Biden and herself.
|
|
The implication here is that there wasn't enough incoming ad revenue to continue to support the show's further production.
|
|
"Stainless steel use is also highly skewed towards kitchen applications (and, by implication, nickel and ferrochrome demand)," it added.
|
|
The implication is that if the server is sending malicious payloads to Android users, iPhone users could be next.
|
|
It's one of those pieces whose meaning is impossible to articulate but perfectly clear as a feeling of implication.
|
|
The implication is that Logan's self-regard often blinds him to how other people can twist him in knots.
|
|
It's occasionally said that this is already widely accepted as an implication of the current public concept of "woman".
|
|
The implication is that no one is surprised this is what happened when a woman is at the wheel.
|
|
But by far the more troubling implication of Trump's comments is that PTSD and suicide are signs of weakness.
|
|
By implication, that singles them out as avatars of progressive foreign policy in a field of 20-plus candidates.
|
|
The implication is that Comey was asking Sessions to protect the FBI investigation from interference from the White House.
|
|
Still, the strong implication is that ancient farming was the result of much more geographic collaboration than we believed.
|
|
Implication being that smartphones are now playing second fiddle to the virtual future it's hoping to build with Valve.
|
|
The implication, therefore, is that most of Greenland was ice-free when beryllium-19903 was raining down on GISP2.
|
|
The implication that technology companies don't cooperate with law enforcement when it comes to terrorist investigations is flatly dishonest.
|
|
Another implication of amateur politics is that in order to govern, you do eventually need to build a coalition.
|
|
The implication is that she has his ear, but that's something we might be able to confirm this week.
|
|
While the regulatory control surely has measurable revenue implication on payments firms, some experts point to another adverse consequence.
|
|
With its social death, Google Glass' public face turns inward, and the implication doesn't need too much explaining right?
|
|
At least that's the implication of a new car that purports to be designed to meet women's unique needs.
|
|
The effect has a lot of implication for spacecraft construction and the future of metal-based construction in vacuums.
|
|
As such, rating implications are dependent on the financial implication, strategic rationale, and execution risks inherent in any transaction.
|
|
"The interesting implication is that this same approach could be used for different sorts of neuroscience questions," Barry said.
|
|
The second is somewhat more difficult to rebut, since a lot of it is based on innuendo or implication.
|
|
That's the implication of a survey conducted by the pro-refugee human rights group Amnesty International, released this week.
|
|
The underlying implication was that Trump, who ran against Obamacare, would consider dropping the administration's defense of the subsidies.
|
|
As news of his letter to Congress broke, stocks plummeted and the partisan implication of his intervention became clear.
|
|
Pence is known to have embraced conversion therapy for gay people ... so the implication was the opposite of subtle.
|
|
After all, no other president has publicly professed that his motives are "politically [in]correct" and by implication unconstitutional.
|
|
They're malicious, but slow and predictable, and the film veers away from their kid-eating activities except by implication.
|
|
Much has been written elsewhere as to why the implication of draft dodging had such power to end careers.
|
|
That seems to be the implication, and Twitter is convinced that Obama just revealed the sex of those twins.
|
|
The implication was, 'Well you were not a Trump supporter in the primary, and so don't expect much money.
|
|
Yet Mr. Lew, in an interview, bristled at the implication that until now his stewardship had been low-key.
|
|
Trump's implication of Barack Obama, also renews a fight the president picked early in his tenure with his predecessor.
|
|
The implication is not only spatial but temporal: Time past and time future are accepted with equal calm here.
|
|
The implication here: Why would you have to have all of the proof if you have enough of it?
|
|
The implication was clear enough and right in line with the tone of Trump's efforts to rev up conservatives.
|
|
The big problem in Sanders's idea is the implication that there's a clean correlation between unemployment, crime, and incarceration.
|
|
The implication is that by mapping out the internet's geography, I'm basically offering up a blueprint for destroying it.
|
|
And while it didn't name it directly, the clear implication was that company was the one owned by Bezos.
|
|
The implication for policymakers is that exclusively focusing on bad actors is unlikely to deter future misconduct by others.
|
|
But it's not like the flavor — a taffy that gave up its dreams — makes up for the visual implication.
|
|
But there are also problems with these income-oriented approaches (beyond their implication that money equals contentment and success).
|
|
They have the implication of a personal space, but they are also connected to a broader cultural image bank.
|
|
The implication there is that before she ate from that tree, she didn't know there was such a thing.
|
|
This lines up with Blade Runner's strong implication that humanity has deluded itself as to its fitness to continue.
|
|
That, at least, is the implication of its decision to raise the central bank's benchmark interest rate in December.
|
|
The implication seems to be that if Democrats can win there, they can win in the other 120 districts.
|
|
Elysa Braunstein said the implication from her father was that Mr. Trump did not have a disqualifying foot ailment.
|
|
In other words, the majority opinion — and by implication, his own vote — wasn't really as harsh as it seemed.
|
|
It was widely believed his implication was Jews normally think they can buy a candidate with their vast wealth.
|
|
The strange implication is that the reality of the quantum world remains amorphous or indefinite until scientists start measuring.
|
|
The decision caused widespread outrage because of the implication that only women were being taxed to provide the aid.
|
|
Here, the clear implication went, was smoking-gun proof that Sanders was telling the truth, and Warren was lying.
|
|
If these persons are to be pitied, by implication, members of risk groups who 'infected' them must be culpable.
|
|
NT: But it seems like the implication of this memo is, go ahead and push the algorithm live, right?
|
|
" Even if well-meaning, the implication and assumption in these comments are the same: "You're not a real American.
|
|
But he said he "fell off his chair" when he saw the news of his implication in an attack.
|
|
AS YOU HAVE A DOWNTURN, I BELIEVE THAT THERE'S A POLITICAL AND SOCIAL IMPLICATION TO THAT RELATED TO POPULISM.
|
|
It did not walk back the implication that D.J. had in some way played the part of the seducer.
|
|
To her, the implication was clear: If you couldn't make your business work, you just weren't trying hard enough.
|
|
The implication was that Egypt could use authoritarianism to make decisive economic policy, but few outsiders take this seriously.
|
|
Years ago, when I started writing in English, my husband asked if I understood the implication of the decision.
|
|
The email's implication was that he had been released early in order to carry out the mission in Berlin.
|
|
One main implication of a stagnant or declining economy is rising unemployment rate, which has been seen in Iran.
|
|
His implication was that Mr. Trump has been the sinless target of a Deep State plot to destroy him.
|
|
The implication is that the person that wrote the report is the person that should come and present it.
|
|
Kasulis scoffed at Brafman's implication that Shkreli committed no fraud because people ultimately profited from their dealings with him.
|
|
Some saw in the show a critique of masculinity and the implication that inside all men are little boys.
|
|
Her father, a mechanic, drove her to the courthouse, but he didn't fully grasp the implication of the charges.
|
|
The implication, however, is that for the first time since early 2016, the trend in equities is on watch.
|
|
Maybe. But as far as the implication that in-flight data couldn't be monetized goes, that's simply not true.
|
|
The implication is that Black women are incapable of making "right" and "sound moral" decisions about their reproductive health.
|
|
"The implication was that access to those open-air monuments was denied in the last shutdown," the official said.
|
|
When we fail to maintain this prescription, the implication is that we simply lack will power or self-discipline.
|
|
Theoretical mathematics and physics with no implication for society would not be the kind of article we're looking for.
|
|
The clear implication is that air support could have saved two lives but was held up by bureaucratic incompetence.
|
|
There will be the implication that she must be on par with the best to be worthy of praise.
|
|
The implication here is that the FISA warrant to spy on Page was improperly authorized, and potentially politically motivated.
|
|
The implication is that these people couldn't imagine an Asian family having money or outranking them in the social hierarchy.
|
|
The implication was that extremism was something you could never truly shake, no matter how much you might want to.
|
|
That's especially bad when the implication is that black Americans demonstrating for their rights are the source of the problem.
|
|
"That carries a clear implication that something is wrong inside my head, that I&aposm insane," Ramos told the judge.
|
|
Brown does not provide a reason for this practice; the implication is that that's just how Margaret lived her life.
|
|
There is no clear indication if the repairs will be made for free, but that seems to be the implication.
|
|
The implication here is that Trump has no desire to launch any more strikes unless Assad uses more chemical weapons.
|
|
The strong implication was that the U.S. either had a human source in his entourage or was monitoring his communications.
|
|
The implication is that stress in these sectors would be "more than enough to contribute to a recession," he concluded.
|
|
The implication is clear: intellectually disabled people neither negotiate with fellow miscreants nor successfully flee and hide from law enforcement.
|
|
It sits atop a table cloth of trompe l'oeil Cheetah fur, with an implication that is too dark to contemplate.
|
|
His implication is that the authorities are complicit in the current invasion, just as they were in the last one.
|
|
And the implication was that I was telling people to give up and not be active and to not fight.
|
|
The implication is shareholders are valuing PMI's smokeless products at only about $38 billion, only just over half Breakingviews' valuation.
|
|
Our dependence on big donors' generosity would have to fall and, by implication, we would have to be less extravagant.
|
|
In other words, the implication here is that the faulty battery life estimations are largely responsible for the bad reports.
|
|
Beck didn't take kindly to the implication that pro-life conservatives were all hypocrites, and fired Lahren from her gig.
|
|
At the same time, he dismissed any suggestion that the police were responsible, saying he was "annoyed" at the implication.
|
|
General Jack Keane is here with what he calls the significant strategic objective and implication of this hugely consequential visit.
|
|
The key implication is that just 0.1% of site visitors would freely choose to enable all cookie categories/vendors — i.e.
|
|
While their characters may compete for royal favor, she's tired of the implication that the actresses themselves aren't getting along.
|
|
The implication is that you can probably get any research, no matter how bad the first comments are, published somewhere.
|
|
The implication being that users are willing to trade a portion of their privacy for that kind of incremental convenience.
|
|
Patti Solis Doyle, a former Hillary Clinton campaign official, wrote that Trump's tweet made a "vile, disgusting implication" about Gillibrand.
|
|
The implication is that corporations could have cut wages significantly before the tax hike without negative consequences and simply didn't.
|
|
The implication is that the rate of savings has almost certainly declined more sharply, reflecting a big increase in consumption.
|
|
McCain's statement is true, the implication that all military leadership supports the notion of women joining the infantry is untrue.
|
|
But the more important implication is that the Mate 9 has a bigger screen than most top phablets out there.
|
|
The implication is that investors fear the Bank of Japan will admit defeat and no longer engage in market manipulation.
|
|
The implication was clear: If anybody is going to keep themselves alive for centuries, it's probably a super-proficient woman.
|
|
The implication is that the Republican U.S. presidential candidate is a living "special interest" of the kind he has decried.
|
|
The implication here, that reverberates throughout the exhibition, is that flesh cannot be extricated from the metaphysics of abstract machinery.
|
|
The implication here is clear: Twitter does not view Trump's tweets Sunday as a violation of its hateful conduct policy.
|
|
The implication here is that laughter trivializes or softens things that need to be confronted and sometimes that's the case.
|
|
The implication is of course that if she—a self-avowed ex-sugar fiend—can find good health, anybody can.
|
|
The implication is clear: Dao, who was brutally assaulted and unwillingly thrust into the spotlight, is not a real victim.
|
|
The implication from Mr Jones, of course, is that Britons are in more debt than ever (thanks to Mr Osborne).
|
|
Older residents are insulted by the implication they are donkeys, which is like calling someone an idiot in Palestinian society.
|
|
It does not make any direct allegations of wrongdoing, instead relying on unsubtle innuendo and implication to make its point.
|
|
One implication discussed is the idea of digital containers that are designed not to store content, but to release it.
|
|
The implication here is that pro-choice women are at least soft on murder, if they haven't committed it themselves.
|
|
The Catch 22 here is that by addressing body-shamers, the tacit implication is that said behavior is indeed acceptable.
|
|
The implication: that financing America's military is robbing the country of money that would be better devoted to humanitarian endeavors.
|
|
The implication of the internal-migration study is that the geographically left-behind are dimmer, on average, than the leavers.
|
|
The implication seems to be that Coats and Clapper withheld that information from their public statements because it is classified.
|
|
This is the radical implication of the Internet of Things—a fundamental shift in the relationship between customers and companies.
|
|
"The implication is that there's a need for a conversation on long-term goals and helping them prepare," Lord said.
|
|
Roberts referred to statements by Presidents George Washington and Dwight Eisenhower rejecting religious bigotry, with tacit negative implication to Trump.
|
|
The implication was that students who support trigger warnings and safe spaces are narrow-minded, oversensitive and opposed to dialogue.
|
|
The implication here is that Trump tried to warn his party about Moore, but voters insisted on a doomed candidate.
|
|
By implication, weed might also keep your farm in business if the apocalyptic heat from climate change melts your vegetables.
|
|
The implication being that we're so tragic and ignorant that we'd willingly subject ourselves to the degrading scenario they've envisioned.
|
|
It would appear, then, that military personnel are sharing their information publicly, perhaps without knowing it or realizing the implication.
|
|
The implication is that Medicare Extra would compete alongside private plans as a "public option" — at least for some time.
|
|
The implication being House Democratic or Republicans members could win in districts in which their party's presidential candidate did poorly.
|
|
"The positive implication is the Fed's looking at capital growth, not just earnings," said Jeffery Harte, principal at Sandler O'Neill.
|
|
For investors the implication is that they should be more careful, and perhaps parsimonious, in allocating to the largest funds.
|
|
The implication: While right-wing blowhards may infuriate Democrats, they sometimes pose the greatest danger to their own true believers.
|
|
The implication is that your child will be able to do that in the future on his or her own.
|
|
The implication is that just the facts should offer more than enough in the way of tragic pity and terror.
|
|
"But the implication of an uncertain German political future makes serious foreign policy ripples, particularly in Europe," Mr. Janes said.
|
|
But it does seem to be that the implication of this research is that we are way underinvested in children.
|
|
"Any implication or statement to the contrary is unfortunate and misleading," the agency said in its reply to the report.
|
|
And a natural implication that people are going to draw is that Clinton's email server is a crucially important story.
|
|
How far to take this implication is unclear, naturally, but it's worth considering a couple of highlights in this tradition.
|
|
The implication was that he might trade her for the two Canadians held at the time he made that statement.
|
|
The implication was that recounting a tale of trauma shortly after it happens does not necessarily contribute to healing it.
|
|
The implication was that the House might have to change its bill and pass it again — or even start over.
|
|
It was a controversial opinion, especially given its key implication at the time — that the United States could abduct Gen.
|
|
"It's more interesting to look at the long term implication — rather than 'is it good for our quarter or not'."
|
|
One person said that the woman didn't explicitly condition her continued silence on a job, although the implication seemed clear.
|
|
The implication: Mr. Cohen struck the deal with Ms. Clifford on his own and without the knowledge of the president.
|
|
Mr. Leno said he was very troubled by what he perceived as Ms. Alioto's implication that illegal immigrants were criminals.
|
|
"This idea I&aposm anti-millennial ... the implication is I don&apost care much about it," he told The Times.
|
|
What is the implication, if any, of these texts being exchanged before we learned of the killing of Mr. Khashoggi?
|
|
Mayor de Blasio is facing increasing criticism for his vocal support of Mr. Ponte — and by implication, other correction officials.
|
|
The gran reserva classification, she said, comes with the implication that producers are selecting their best wines for prolonged aging.
|
|
Gates' implication here is that if he had been paying more attention, Windows Mobile would have been a better product.
|
|
But the implication of the new research is that support for populism is a deeper-rooted feature of Western economies.
|
|
People object, in other words, to the misleading implication — not to a failure of will or a weakness of character.
|
|
Kingwell doesn't quite say it, but the implication is clear: This is what happens when the Cubs win the Series.
|
|
Under French law, this step means "serious or consistent evidence" points to probable implication of a suspect in a crime.
|
|
"-- exploding across social media like a neutron bomb over the offhand implication ... that somebody somewhere is thinking of" a remake.
|
|
Two important new books offer useful and complementary explanations for what has occurred and, by implication, what must be done.
|
|
The implication is unmistakable: We do a lot for you, and I now expect you to do something for me.
|
|
Many of his neighbors have said they were offended by the implication that residents would dispose of cooking grease improperly.
|
|
The implication: we tell ourselves stories in order to live, we call them novels in order to not get sued.
|
|
"Invoking the Constitution to enjoin the laws of a state requires more than 'slight implication and vague conjecture,'" Shepherd wrote.
|
|
In their statements, both regulators took aim at the new definition of the "trading account" and its implication going forward.
|
|
For what it's worth, I'm 25 — part of the generation that supposedly demands instant everything (an implication I find insulting).
|
|
The film's telling of Garland's youth matches some historical accounts, including, for instance, the implication that Mayer touched her inappropriately.
|
|
And if you catch the implication, that means Trump himself could help fix the economy by resolving the trade conflicts.
|
|
Trump pushed back on The Times' article and took issue with the implication that McGahn may have turned on him.
|
|
A natural implication, then, is that interfering with the competitive functioning of the market often does more harm than good.
|
|
We cannot remain silent and by implication approve of the use of The Post-Gazette to provide cover for racism.
|
|
He also told his old crew he missed them ... the implication ... working for 45 ain't no walk in the park.
|
|
The question of who won this Tuesday was a mostly symbolic one, without too much implication for the delegate count.
|
|
It consisted of illustrated scenes that were "ambiguous and fraught with implication, and therefore open to imaginative interpretation," Rothenstein writes.
|
|
The scary implication: The US was putting its warships in place in preparation for a possible strike on North Korea.
|
|
The implication was clear: If they got rid of the federal government, they'd have control over their land and lives again.
|
|
The implication is clear: It is not "wildness" that makes a place violent, nor "chaos" that comes when the law fails.
|
|
In particular, current growth in the advanced economies is well above potential, with the implication that output gaps are closing quickly.
|
|
The implication is that many producing countries will see revenues and formerly high resource rents decline, to the benefit of consumers.
|
|
For his part, Harvest Volatility Management partner Dennis Davitt believes that Trump's Wednesday comments have a more global implication for investors.
|
|
The implication being that Verizon or AT&T might find new ways to privilege services they favor or profit from directly.
|
|
A few heard something different—an implication, in that "No, ma'am", that Arabs and good family men were mutually exclusive categories.
|
|
China showing up and lending money at rates that clearly have some implication that goes well beyond any private sector entity.
|
|
There is, however, a protruding implication when it comes to Kawaii design choices applied to works within this gamification of intimacy.
|
|
But the implication, whether intentional or not, that we, as individuals, are fully in control of our food consumption is absurd.
|
|
A longer-term implication of this may be on how well a firm manages and aligns its talent with its strategy.
|
|
Indeed, an implication of the financialisation thesis is that rising interest rates could put the decades-long housing boom into reverse.
|
|
If women's bodies are currency, the implication here is that they are a currency he should by all rights already have.
|
|
The larger implication, Bar El told MUNCHIES, is that the research proves that computers might be more capable than we thought.
|
|
Other banks, including Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo & Co, said they were reviewing the executive order and its implication on staff.
|
|
The implication was that, aged 22 and one of Japan's richest politicians, he personally did not risk ending up in penury.
|
|
Chastain is right when she points out that male characters aren't called "strong," because the implication is that they already are.
|
|
Another clear implication of the stress on "evil" is that there is no point trying to stop its effects through regulation.
|
|
The implication is clear -- "Zoey 101" is itching to run it back for a new show, which might very well happen.
|
|
The thinly-veiled implication of Mr Mattis's resignation statement is that the president's impulses are a threat to American security interests.
|
|
" Said Anderson to Reuters, "I don't know what they'll do with [Musk], but there's no implication that we've done anything wrong . . .
|
|
The word is journeyman, and the implication is that a journeyman player in some way deserves to be on the journey.
|
|
As a nuclear power, Pakistan could also be offended further at Trump's implication that it has bowed to his administration's pressure.
|
|
"The implication that, as one legislator said, a 'family man' would be more suitable smacks of anti-Catholicism," Father Martin said.
|
|
A spokesman for the Armenian Defense Ministry did not comment on the implication of the exercises for Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.
|
|
But the implication would still be the same given the optics if a president with an (R) next to his name.
|
|
The true implication of the 2017 elections is what they mean for redistricting and electoral reforms in the years to come.
|
|
Markets are highly sensitive to talk of tapering the programme because of the implication of less liquidity in the financial system.
|
|
The immediate implication of the IMF study is that repairing the damage to the financial system should help revitalize economic growth.
|
|
Like most home cidermakers, Hammond and Doumis often deal with the implication that since they are not commercial, they aren't serious.
|
|
Cardi B is striking back at Nicki Minaj's implication that the Invasion of Privacy rapper pays to have her songs played.
|
|
Even if he did call other countries shitholes, the implication was, this is just a part of Trump's America First ideology.
|
|
Her implication was a federal union in which a hitherto heavily centralised state, dominated by the ethnic Burman majority, devolves powers.
|
|
On CNN in prime time Wednesday night, there was extended implication about internment camps in the U.S. under a Trump administration.
|
|
Their implication for enhanced social welfare is primarily through the change in relative status conferred by the consumption of such goods.
|
|
Without that connection, the un-analyzed quotation will not ring out correctly, but instead clang with the confusing implication of endorsement.
|
|
"In the census case there is a pure timing implication that creates an extraordinary circumstance unrelated to the merits," said Vladeck.
|
|
The implication is that tax reform should maintain considerable progressivity, but focus less on inequality and more on ending stagnant growth.
|
|
The implication is that Lightning McQueen is getting old and that he, like Russell Crowe in Cinderella Man, should probably retire.
|
|
His implication is that if there were less quakes in past, perhaps the recent dearth of quakes wouldn't be so exceptional.
|
|
The implication is that draconian measures could eventually bring Pakistan to its knees and cause it to capitulate to U.S. demands.
|
|
Her Gertrude in Mel Gibson's Hamlet was another triumph of implication, loving her son with a suggestive incestuousness buried under warmth.
|
|
There's a strong implication that she, too, was eventually lobotomized and that her husband had a hand in getting it done.
|
|
"The implication that political people would have to review the science before it was articulated is disturbing," she told the Globe.
|
|
The other major implication is that WTI is going to become considerably more important in pricing decisions among Asia crude buyers.
|
|
" "The implication is that millions of people are going to have their lives ruined or lose their lives because of this.
|
|
By "American," some of her Asian friends also meant "white," the implication being that she was somehow climbing the social ladder.
|
|
"Oh no, I don't think that's what he's saying and I certainly don't think that's the implication of that," Lankford said.
|
|
The implication is that the harmful effects of early life experiences on gene expression are potentially reversible much later in life.
|
|
Volumes are increasing, the price is shooting up, there is no implication of bitcoin in the real world, it's quite limited.
|
|
I think we really need to acknowledge with these conversations that we talk about screen time with this implication of privilege.
|
|
Despite almost all special elections having national implication over the last year, this race has largely flown under the national radar.
|
|
Their pain is magnified by the popular implication that they could have avoided attack if they had made different wardrobe choices.
|
|
Eating whatever you want whenever is good advice all year-round, but in this case, it carries a specific moral implication.
|
|
The Guardian once described them as having "contracted a raging case of the Serious Artists," with the implication that they aren't.
|
|
The implication was evident: The downward slope of the V suggested that a natural limit to human lifespans had been reached.
|
|
I'm fairly sure the implication was that Scientology is the reason that the rioting that happened in Ferguson didn't spread nationwide?
|
|
How do I know that by having these thoughts, these aren't an implication of some desire that is just developing now?
|
|
There isn't any other practical implication for the parent other than spending a couple of days in US Marshals Service custody.
|
|
She prefers the term bridge year, with its implication of a deliberate connection between one stage of life and the next.
|
|
"I understand the implication yes, though this was not why Haben's booking was cancelled in the first place," Truman told TechCrunch.
|
|
The implication was that voters are incredibly myopic: They only care about economic performance in the election year and not before.
|
|
The implication is that people and companies that don't find success can transition, efficiently and without stigma, to more promising ventures.
|
|
With that said, the implication that the media salivates at the possibility of another mass shooting, as Noir claimed, is ridiculous.
|
|
The implication seems to be that, without "educational spankings," kids would run amok (like mine?), and traditional structures would eventually collapse.
|
|
The video was captioned "DAVID HOGG THE ACTOR...." — the implication being that Hogg suspiciously shows up whenever news cameras are rolling.
|
|
The implication is clearly that women falsely claim that they tried to resist and oh, isn't that just typical of women.
|
|
Also thanks for the strong implication that the reason you sexually preyed on a young boy was that you were gay.
|
|
She said the implication was that the French players were no longer defined by skin color but by their shared nationality.
|
|
The implication at the time was that the two men would serve, at the very least, as Dimon's short-term replacements.
|
|
The implication is that we should not be afraid to ask people we are concerned about if they are feeling suicidal.
|
|
The implication is that the public markets are expecting the company to grow more slowly over time, generating less future cash.
|
|
Depending on how convincing you find that notion, there's a strange implication you might draw out of it about the normal.
|
|
The second implication is that ballot reformers in the United States would do well to think about the government formation stage.
|
|
"If you're contradicting yourself every other episode …" Here, he trailed off ominously, but the implication was clear: That way lies chaos.
|
|
To an outsider, Farron's implication that the UK is not a "tolerant, liberal" society for practicing Christians may seem off base.
|
|
Use of the latter suggests an identification with Metropolitan France, the implication being that one is somehow ashamed of one's past.
|
|
The implication is that because Ms. Schumer and, say, Ms. Ratajkowski share certain demographic privileges, the beauty differential no longer applies.
|
|
The implication is that elected officials should have the courage of their own convictions and not outsource their judgment to constituents.
|
|
The other implication is that, by requiring manufacturers to list the products used on the box, tampons might somehow...be better?
|
|
The implication was clear to Mr. Assad: No matter what I do, the Americans will allow me to remain in power.
|
|
The implication: The work Facebook doing on a whole is better for connecting people and promoting an open debate and dialogue.
|
|
The hawkish implication for interest-rate policy lifted the two-year note yield, which reflects market expectations of interest rates hikes.
|
|
Another source close to McGahn disputed any implication that he was doing anything but following the requests of Trump's legal team.
|
|
"The implication that GEP is some sort of shell company couldn't be further from the truth," Surabian's firm told the outlet.
|
|
Second, and most importantly, Trump said that Esper "terminated" Spencer — a clear implication that the defense secretary removed the Navy boss.
|
|
It annoys him, this implication that what he's doing is somehow cruel to the women who have signed up for it.
|
|
There is sweetness in the implication that being overtaken by one mess after another might be necessary for a decent life.
|
|
Kevin Riley, editor at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution where Scruggs worked, recently told PEOPLE there's "no evidence" to support the implication.
|
|
Kevin Riley, editor at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution where Scruggs worked, recently told PEOPLE there's "no evidence" to support the implication.
|
|
On Saturday, he also tweeted that Trump's remarks about Baltimore were racist: "Racism often manifests as subtext and implication," he wrote.
|
|
The implication, intended or not, is that you must escape because you are special, you don't belong here among these drones.
|
|
One implication for consumers is that you have to be careful when putting an LED bulb into an enclosed light fixture.
|
|
"The greater implication is that we need to educate youth about vaping in general and the JUUL in particular," he says.
|
|
The implication is clear: If they felt like they had a choice, they would have ditched Trump a long time ago.
|
|
Under principled small government, you'd be able to get a passport; the implication that less government equals chaos hurts our agenda.
|
|
The implication here is clear: The only character who really knows what happened is this deer head, and it ain't talking.
|
|
So the implication here is that Clinton jeopardized national security (and to the Russians, to boot!) to enrich her personal foundation.
|
|
The implication seems clear: We're meant to feel these hugs, the comfort and love and sometimes frustration that courses through them.
|
|
But the implication of the Obama administration's revocation of her passport was that she had never been a citizen at all.
|
|
However, the title's deeper implication seems to be that "America" represents a set of liberal values and ideals and that an isolationist like Lindbergh could only win power by conspiring against those ideals with a hostile foreign government—an implication reinforced when Herman repeatedly describes Lindbergh as a "traitor" for his cordial relationship with Adolf Hitler.
|
|
The practical implication of this connection is that Americans who are not strong authoritarians behave more like them when they feel threatened.
|
|
The good news is that the negative implication of guns + AR is easily avoided by simply not using the augmented reality tool.
|
|
A major implication of the Jacobs and Roberts study is the suggestion that Denisovans and Neanderthals hunkered down in the cave together.
|
|
One implication of this theory is that it would be a surprisingly simple task to persuade the wealthy to view taxes differently.
|
|
"Mr Cohen's implication of POTUS in a federal crime make the danger of Kavanaugh's nomination to the SCOTUS abundantly clear," Schumer tweeted.
|
|
They've also pushed bills declaring Israel a "national state of the Jewish people" (and not, by implication, its Muslim or Christian citizens).
|
|
The implication is that these kinds of odds movements happened so frequently with these 15 players that fixing is a reasonable explanation.
|
|
" "Why does the implication have to be that sex is a thing men get to take from women and women give up?
|
|
Other artificial creatures that were more ruthless, more efficient, more robotic – and, by implication, less human – might turn out to be stronger.
|
|
The implication seems to be that Tyler photographed all the characters from season 1 and is now using the photographs as punishment.
|
|
A more serious implication of diplomatic immunity has been in the news this week, around the tragic death of a British teenager.
|
|
"The clear implication is that monetary policy will need to do more to boost underlying inflation," he said in a note Friday.
|
|
The implication is that on a per-person average, humans are leaving a smaller ecological imprint now than they had been previously.
|
|
As investors digest the implication of Britain's vote to leave the European Union, the technology sector is hungrily examining every possible angle.
|
|
RICHARD CLARIDA: I think you need to look at a potential implication of that for exports, for manufacturing, for the U.S. economy.
|
|
This is us catching up with the rest of the world, this is just the implication that it is a global economy.
|
|
The implication is obvious—that other employees will be hired on their merits, but flight attendants will be screened for their looks.
|
|
"Will I get to see a doctor?" she asks, the implication being that this young black man can only be a nurse.
|
|
The implication was that the material might be so inflammatory to Mr. Silver that it would be hard to find unbiased jurors.
|
|
"We cannot in the NFL, in any way, give the implication that we are in any way disrespecting the flag," Jones said.
|
|
"Cost savings drove beats in every region and the implication is estimates have to be reset higher," it remarked in a note.
|
|
Ana asks Jack about him, and the implication is hard to miss: "Vincent… I haven't thought about him in years," Ana said.
|
|
If she didn't quite call the president a wuss, the implication was clear to reporters standing by with ice on their necks.
|
|
A fascinating implication of the new study is that frozen worlds like Enceladus could become a watery paradises in the distant future.
|
|
The implication is that if I have children with someone who also has the gene, our children could have sickle cell disease.
|
|
And some seem to object to the name, hearing in the phrase "Black lives matter" the implication that other lives do not.
|
|
"That will not happen until they have sontaku," says Yukari Sekiguchi, Shintomi's manager, referring to the Japanese concept of understanding by implication.
|
|
The implication, though, is that America really needs to take a comprehensive look at how it responds to drug misuse and addiction.
|
|
The implication was obvious: Democrats believed many Republicans had just cost themselves their political careers by voting for an overhaul of Obamacare.
|
|
The implication of the bar-goers' first reaction, of course, is that these aggressive, team-based sports aren't meant for women fans.
|
|
The implication of these words is clear: America is so weak that it cares more about collecting fees than upholding treaty obligations.
|
|
Strawberry tells kids to buy things to keep the puppy happy — the implication is if you don't pay, you're making puppies sad.
|
|
The implication: What if you're wrong and carbon dioxide pollution -- from burning fossil fuels -- really is the main driver of global warming?
|
|
The implication from Trump's original letter was that Comey had reached out to him to let him know he wasn't under investigation.
|
|
However, one could step that up, so to speak, via an implication that change is not simply in the future, but imminent.
|
|
After such a sharp rise in gold values, by implication, total gold holdings within any portfolio have increased on a relative basis.
|
|
The impact: The immediate political implication is that it will be much tougher to cut Medicaid to help pay for tax cuts.
|
|
An important implication of QI, and one of the main reasons it is so controversial, is that it abandons the equivalence principle.
|
|
But the implication of the judge's logic is that the federal government has been breaking the law for a very long time.
|
|
"If your implication is that the White House wants this, I think that's wrong," said Senate judiciary chair Chuck Grassley Wednesday night.
|
|
ECOWAS also warned that any implication of the army or security forces would be considered a coup and also met with sanctions.
|
|
While it's tame for this day and age, the implication that Lucy and her husband Ricky had sex was a big deal.
|
|
Only, when the Enterprise (or Voyager or DS9) passes each test, often with flying colors, so too, by implication, does civilization itself.
|
|
The Meitu executives I spoke with were careful to dispel the implication that their apps influenced people's preconceptions about what is attractive.
|
|
The implication is that Frank wrote a song glorifying date-rape and that mom and Johnny gleefully went along singing about it.
|
|
The other was the "testing of a long-range ICBM," the implication being this had been achieved with the most recent launch.
|
|
A New York listing would be a way of bringing the company — and by implication, the country — into the full financial sphere.
|
|
Dana argues that its case, which involves a specific sukuk structure known as mudaraba, has no implication for the broad sukuk market.
|
|
She conceded that Wiegert had "warped views on immigrants" but bristled at the implication that working with him tainted her own efforts.
|
|
Mr. Trump might be fueled by pure narcissism — that's the implication of this video comparing him to a group of mean girls.
|
|
Fila bristled at the implication that his firm had filed the cases for any reason but the best interest of the client.
|
|
" The ministry claimed that "it had, and will have, no implication of partisanship in that tasking, and no implications for UK policy.
|
|
By implication, then, what ends up becoming substitution very often looks like complementary or coexistence for an awfully long time at first.
|
|
One important implication of this work is that CBM is capable of altering brain activity in people from a non-clinical population.
|
|
The implication is that, by excelling at a sport that requires large muscles, she's in some way taking an almost political stance.
|
|
If the rumor was true, that it was causing tumors in dogs, the implication was that it would cause cancer in humans.
|
|
The suggestion is that these ordinary souls are waiting to be transformed, with the added implication that we might be, as well.
|
|
One implication, which I and others have pushed, is that the underlying case for a 2 percent inflation target is all wrong.
|
|
But one nerve-racking possible implication is that Mr. Papadopoulos has recently worn a wire in conversations with other former campaign officials.
|
|
"The implication is that marketers are cutting spend across the board," RBC analyst Mark Mahaney wrote in a research report Monday night.
|
|
That's the implication of two fascinating new studies that show how people systematically change their beliefs in thinking about the financial future.
|
|
Morgan's tweet raised the ire of numerous men, who resented the implication that there was anything unmanly about caring for one's child.
|
|
Here's the third implication, which should scare you: The nature of the modern G.O.P.'s game gives it a bias against democracy.
|
|
But Wednesday's tweet is different since it's not just an implication of bias — it's a direct accusation of a conflict of interest.
|
|
Hillary Clinton had nothing to do with it, and the implication that McCabe's wife was just pocketing Clinton money directly is absurd.
|
|
" The inescapable, and deeply disturbing, implication is that "high standards" really means "standards that all students will never be able to meet.
|
|
It's unclear what the implication of Monday's ruling will be for all the lawsuits, but critics of opioid companies cheered the decision.
|
|
The I.O.C. did not specify, however, how those criteria were applied, or if an athlete's implication had necessarily constituted an automatic disqualification.
|
|
Hikvision and Dahua were blacklisted last year because of their implication in the persecution of the Uighur people in China's Xinjiang region.
|
|
His implication seems to be that because the information in the dossier was apparently gleaned from interviewing Russians, that amounts to collusion.
|
|
The implication is that we can easily be influenced by authority to do terrible harm to others — just by receiving an order.
|
|
"I unequivocally reject any implication that Scopolamine was ever intentionally administered to Justify, or any of my horses," Baffert wrote on Twitter.
|
|
While these august publications didn't make the point explicitly, the implication was clear: Here was another madman who got what he deserved.
|
|
That's the implication of a Morningstar study that helps to explain why fund investing often works better in theory than in practice.
|
|
However, I disagree with his implication that uncertainty in meaning of a word or a line evidences a flaw in the poetry.
|
|
The unspoken implication was that some of the things his father brought home, like the bloody boots, had been taken from prisoners.
|
|
In January, CNN reported President Donald Trump, speaking behind closed doors about illegal immigration, decried "shithole countries," with an implication towards Africa.
|
|
Roberts intended his argument as a reductio ad absurdum, assuming that defenders of same-sex marriage would be alarmed by the implication.
|
|
Being a mom doesn't have any implication on my ability to be professional or be a successful model or do my job.
|
|
While he did not claim that the art fair was in any way responsible for this visibility, the implication was nonetheless there.
|
|
"The implication is really dramatic for the whole ecosystem down there," said Dr. Beck, also a professor at Towson University in Maryland.
|
|
Signs of renewed growth in China's manufacturing activity are a major positive for base metals demand and by implication prices this year.
|
|
Research by economists employed by Uber has an almost radical implication: that the company couldn't raise hourly compensation if it wanted to.
|
|
A third implication is that we may be witnessing the beginning of the end of the American era in the Middle East.
|
|
The clear implication is that this material is stolen by spies, probably hacked, for how else would the Russian government have it?
|
|
Bank chief executives met with the central bank on Thursday to discuss the liquidity implication of the withdrawal from the banking system.
|
|
Nothing could be further from the truth, and yet we know that Trump's use of the term has a dog-whistle implication.
|
|
Djokovic said he would read the documents, which have been available for months, and balked at any implication of guilt by association.
|
|
Mr. Schiff used it to liken Mr. Trump to a monarch, but the implication was that Republicans were terrified of crossing him.
|
|
The implication is that the more exceptional a performance is, the fewer meaningful, applicable lessons we can actually learn from the "winner".
|
|
But I have to disagree with SNL's implication that Bush was as bad, if not worse, of a president as Donald Trump.
|
|
"I basically said, 'I don't care what the financial implication is,'" he recalled at a recent appearance at the WSJ CEO Council.
|
|
But like other social media companies, it has vehemently denied any implication that there's a wider ideological bias baked into its technology.
|
|
One implication is that smiling may be a useful strategy to improve economy and to make you feel more relaxed during running.
|
|
The implication is that Ned and his kind — decent, thrifty and proper — are as irrelevant to the modern world as his product.
|
|
The Constitution also authorizes national defense (including, in part, NASA), and administration of the District of Columbia (including, by implication, the Smithsonian).
|
|
" The implication for Dann is clear: "The pinxter flower was emblematic of a kind of personal Pentecost for Thoreau; he could now . . .
|
|
But Kevin Riley, editor at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution where Scruggs worked, recently told PEOPLE there's "no evidence" to support the implication.
|
|
Campaign staffers took the image down, but two days later Trump angrily defended it, insisting that there was no anti-Semitic implication.
|
|
To Dr. Brody, the implication was that something suffers in the immune systems of people who persevere in the face of adversity.
|
|
His implication was that if the data was incomplete, the committee would have no choice but to recommend Russia be declared noncompliant.
|
|
"The implication in the Panel Report was that U.F.O.s were a nonsense (nonscience) matter, to be debunked at all costs," Hynek wrote.
|
|
The real implication is that rigid adherence to extreme expression of a few select masculine norms is related to poorer health outcomes.
|
|
And the political science term for the phenomenon even retains the implication that black voters are being held captive by the party.
|
|
The implication is that the meaning and intent of the framers is perfectly clear, and that judges should adhere rigidly to that.
|
|
These entities are not meant to scare us, so much as to discountenance us with the implication that we could be afraid.
|
|
Nevertheless, Moore's protest at the coarsening of popular entertainment — and, by implication, everything else — remains deeply felt and somehow also very funny.
|
|
That was the implication of a remarkable article published on the Lawfare blog this week by the FBI's former general counsel, Jim Baker.
|
|
The researchers also modeled the rate at which such interstellar objects may have collided with Earth—an important implication for the panspermia hypothesis.
|
|
The implication in the report is that it's the smaller, more agile team put together to nip at the heels of the other.
|
|
Despite his implication that the Fast and Furious is stalling, the franchise has continued to release successful films since its debut in 2001.
|
|
The article prompted an outraged response from Bannon, who told CNN he was "livid" over any implication he and Priebus were at odds.
|
|
The implication of Eichhorn's exhibition, then, is that work can be absolutely nothing, inviting reassessments of our expectations of work and spare time.
|
|
Many people will see more than a hint of racism here in the implication that Puerto Ricans are too lazy to help themselves.
|
|
"The implication is that being a secretary for 10 years doesn't necessarily mean the person is qualified as a chief executive," Tien said.
|
|
The implication was that nearly 20% had a score of less than 660, placing them in a group often referred to as subprime.
|
|
Contacts will come under particular scrutiny, although the implication is that other functions—photos, maybe, or messaging apps—could also be of interest.
|
|
To me, it immediately conjures up an implication that it was the woman's fault, like she somehow 'mishandled the carrying of this baby.
|
|
The show's obvious implication is that Trump's inner circle will begin jumping ship, although, in real life, this administration has been holding on.
|
|
Then, two reports — one from Foreign Policy's John Hudson, and another from CNN's Elise Labott — disputed Rogin's implication that they resigned in protest.
|
|
The implication is as above: The brain is computing its plan according to contexts rather than exhaustive searches of possible routings between stations.
|
|
Despite acknowledging wrongdoing, Novartis said it rejected "the implication that the alleged conduct was sanctioned by the most senior management of Novartis Korea".
|
|
But some viewed her comment as anti-Semitic, in view of the implication that Jews are never really loyal to one nation-state.
|
|
Here are three obvious implications: But there's a fourth implication I haven't seen clearly articulated anywhere, so I want to lay it out.
|
|