Showing posts with label Imply vs. Infer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Imply vs. Infer. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Imply vs. Infer


Imply means to suggest; to indicate indirectly; to involve by logical necessity; to hint at.


When a speaker or sentence implies something, it means that it is conveyed or suggested without being stated outright: When the minister said that he would not rule out a tax increase, he implied (not inferred) that some taxes might be raised.
  • Shania did not actually say that there was going to be a delay but she implied it
  • The size of Sam's house implies he is doing all right.
Infer is sometimes confused with imply

Infer means to deduce; to figure out; to conclude from evidence or premises; surmise; to lead to as a consequence; to reason from circumstance.

Inference is the activity performed by a reader or a interpreter in drawing conclusions that are not explicit in what is said: When the minister said that he would not rule out a tax increase, we inferred that he had been consulting with his new advisers, since his old advisers were in favour of tax reductions.
  • I inferred from Sam's terse reply that I had offended him.
  • From the annual financial reports economists inferred the company was about to go bankrupt.