Purport vs Implication - What's the difference?
purport | implication | Synonyms |
To convey, imply, or profess outwardly (often falsely).
To intend.
import, intention or purpose
* 1748 ,
* 1843 , '', book 4, chapter I, ''Aristocracies
* 1939 ,
(obsolete) disguise; covering
* Spenser
(uncountable) The act of implicating.
(uncountable) The state of being implicated.
(countable) An implying, or that which is implied, but not expressed; an inference, or something which may fairly be understood, though not expressed in words.
* 2011 , Lance J. Rips, Lines of Thought: Central Concepts in Cognitive Psychology (page 168)
(countable, logic) The connective in propositional calculus that, when joining two predicates A and B in that order, has the meaning "if A is true, then B is true".
Purport is a synonym of implication.
As nouns the difference between purport and implication
is that purport is import, intention or purpose while implication is (uncountable) the act of implicating.As a verb purport
is to convey, imply, or profess outwardly (often falsely).purport
English
Verb
(en verb)- He purports himself to be an international man of affairs.
- He purported to become an international man of affairs.
Noun
(en noun)- My practice, you say, refutes my doubts. But you mistake the purport of my question.
- Sorrowful, phantasmal as this same Double Aristocracy of Teachers and Governors now looks, it is worth all men’s while to know that the purport of it is, and remains, noble and most real.
- A child’s brain starts functioning at birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, thousands of dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing an adult’s act, and figuring out its purport .
- For she her sex under that strange purport / Did use to hide.
Anagrams
*implication
English
Noun
- But we can also take a more analytical attitude to these displays, interpreting the movements as no more than approachings, touchings, and departings with no implication that one shape caused the other to move.
