Imply vs Imposed - What's the difference?
imply | imposed |
(of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence
(of a person) to suggest by logical inference
(of a person or proposition) to hint; to insinuate; to suggest tacitly and avoid a direct statement
(archaic) to enfold, entangle.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , I.iv:
(impose)
*1948: , Address at Mechanics Hall in Boston
*:And if the people of other countries don't want communism, we don't want to see it imposed upon them against their will.
As verbs the difference between imply and imposed
is that imply is (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence while imposed is (impose).imply
English
Verb
(en-verb)- The proposition that "all dogs are mammals" implies that my dog is a mammal
- When I state that your dog is brown, I am not implying that all dogs are brown
- What do you mean "we need to be more careful with hygiene"? Are you implying that I don't wash my hands?
- And in his bosome secretly there lay / An hatefull Snake, the which his taile vptyes / In many folds, and mortall sting implyes .