请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 implicate
释义

Definition of implicate in English:

implicate

verb ˈɪmplɪkeɪtˈɪmpləˌkeɪt
[with object]
  • 1Show (someone) to be involved in a crime.

    表明(某人)涉案

    he implicated his government in the murders of three judges
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Yesterday, he also laid out an intricate plot to implicate him in his former wife's murder, stopping short of calling it political interference.
    • Such explicitly parodic celebrities implicate themselves in the culture industry's deception.
    • He never discussed actions, which would implicate him in a crime.
    • They took a very one-sided and heavy handed approach towards implicating you in a large amount of crimes.
    • It transpired that one of the girls she sought to implicate was out of town on a sports trip when the ‘exchange’ took place.
    • She again denied allegations implicating her in the scam.
    • They've been doing everything they can since my release to somehow implicate me with this crime, which is very unethical, but they do it anyways.
    • The report also implicated the gene in diabetes in an isolated population of people from Finland.
    • Yes, contrary to popular belief, often testing is used to exonerate or exculpate possible suspects rather than implicate.
    • Otherwise, we will never get any solution to the problem, because too many people in the legal system and in the law enforcement offices are either directly or indirectly implicated.
    • I know it to be true because my own father was indirectly implicated.
    • However, the accused said he had been falsely implicated in the case.
    • She had always felt that, by refusing to implicate him in the crime of adultery, she was saving him from the ruin that she faced every day.
    • It took some years for her finally to break her contacts with her pimp as he and others tried to implicate her in the murders she had witnessed.
    • I was able to show that several had been ‘doctored’ after Mary's forced abdication to justify what her enemies had done to her, implicating her in crimes she didn't commit.
    • It would not, your Honour, but also, though, in the end, it would not necessarily implicate him in murder either.
    • Then if I am ever implicated in a crime that I didn't commit, I can prove my exact whereabouts beyond any reasonable doubt.
    • The results implicate the area's wild foods, said one expert.
    • That would have included evidence implicating him in murder, would it?
    • He is apologising to a childhood friend for implicating him in a burglary 20 years ago.
    Synonyms
    incriminate, compromise
    involve, connect, embroil, enmesh, ensnare
    expose
    archaic inculpate
    1. 1.1be implicated in Bear some of the responsibility for (an action or process, especially a criminal or harmful one)
      对…负一定责任(尤指罪行或有害行为)
      viruses are known to be implicated in the development of certain cancers
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the second series of experiments, the puppet was destroyed but was clearly out of the child's reach, therefore eliminating the possibility that the child could be implicated in the action.
      • In all, 67 students were implicated in the scam that involved nearly $170,000.
      • You can't get a man who's clean and not a single American rider has been implicated in these latest charges.
      • Brain regions previously implicated in the regulation of attention and impulse control contributed to these interactions.
      • The people who were implicated in major corruption scandals are still key personalities in high-level civil service.
      • But if you are implicated in the wrongdoing - especially if a hot topic like tax evasion or securities fraud is involved - then watch out.
      • If you cannot tell if a brand of fresh spinach was implicated in the outbreak, and the package has a ‘use by date’ of October 1, 2006 or earlier, you should not purchase or eat it.
      • No one was accusing me, but I'm implicated in the crime in a way that I could avoid at home - by blaming the government and the media.
      • Defects in the ability of the E3 to interact with substrates have been implicated in numerous diseases, including neurodegeneration, immunological disorders, hypertension and cancers.
      • No one can say for sure who was implicated to a greater degree in the riots.
      • At least six travel agencies had been implicated in the alleged scam.
      • Arbitrary arrest and detention is common and the armed forces are directly implicated in several murders.
      • Inappropriate folding of specific protein molecules is now being implicated in a number of diseases such as Alzheimer's, diabetes and many autoimmune diseases.
      • Disturbances of normal endothelial function are strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and autoimmune vascular diseases.
      • Some Members of Parliament are being implicated in the illegal mining activities.
      • I did indeed feel a certain admiration but it was mixed with revulsion that I was now implicated in blackmail just by knowing about it.
      • Some of America's other premier companies were also implicated in the scandal.
      • If you are satisfied that he was implicated in the acts in which he is said to have been implicated, he must as completely satisfy you that he is not answer able by reason of unsoundness of mind.
      • Bellbirds have been implicated in the death of swathes of forest between Victoria and Queensland.
      • Under circumstances like these, whether he was implicated in the taking was an issue of fact for the jury.
      Synonyms
      involve in, concern with, associate with, connect with, tie up with
  • 2with clause Convey (a meaning) indirectly through what one says, rather than stating it explicitly.

    暗指,暗示

    by saying that coffee would keep her awake, Mary implicated that she didn't want any

    玛丽说咖啡会让她睡不着,以此暗示她不要。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Using the media richness concept implicates that the content of messages conveyed through the different electronic media should be in accordance with their specific characteristics.
    • She tried to sound cheerful about it, but her undertone implicated that she wasn't looking forward to more staring and pointing from complete strangers.
    • By releasing this record, she implicates that someone, somewhere, is wringing their hands in anticipation for it.
    • This implicates that the man would know everything in order to be questioned by his less knowledgeable wife who would not be allowed to speak there anyway.
    • She is the walking example that being ‘physically challenged’ does not implicate that one cannot be successful.
    • In conclusion, the current study implicates that passive smoking in childhood has a lasting effect on the airways, increasing the risk for adult respiratory symptoms and asthma.
    Synonyms
    imply, suggest, hint, intimate, say indirectly, indicate, insinuate, give someone to understand, give someone to believe, convey the impression, signal
noun ˈɪmplɪkətˈɪmpləˌkeɪtˈimpləˌkātˈɪmplɪkət
Logic
  • A thing implied.

    〔主逻〕蕴(涵)之物

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The dual nature of the Heart represents the meeting of the changeless and the changing, the inevitable and the contingent, the implicate and the manifest.
    • This is an implicate of the inscripturation of revelation.

Derivatives

  • implicative

  • adjective ɪmˈplɪkətɪv
    • Tending to imply something; conveying a meaning indirectly.

      implicative humour
      Example sentencesExamples
      • an implicative proposition
      • Once it is in conjunctive normal form, it is easy to convert it in implicative normal form.
  • implicatively

  • adverbɪmˈplɪkətɪvli
    • That nuclear radiation, due directly or indirectly to human action, is implicatively one with the core explosion.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • According to meta-semiotics and meta-cybernetics generic human and human gender implicatively prescribe the development of social institutes.
      • Its symbol mark is a visual image implicatively expressing its idea and goal and is the most important element and the core of all visual information systems.
  • implicatory

  • adjective

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin implicatus 'folded in', past participle of implicare (see imply). The original sense was 'entwine'; compare with employ and imply. The earliest modern (sense 2 of the verb), dates from the early 17th century.

Definition of implicate in US English:

implicate

verbˈɪmpləˌkeɪtˈimpləˌkāt
[with object]
  • 1Show (someone) to be involved in a crime.

    表明(某人)涉案

    police claims implicated him in many more killings

    警方的声明说他涉嫌另外多起谋杀。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Then if I am ever implicated in a crime that I didn't commit, I can prove my exact whereabouts beyond any reasonable doubt.
    • She had always felt that, by refusing to implicate him in the crime of adultery, she was saving him from the ruin that she faced every day.
    • It transpired that one of the girls she sought to implicate was out of town on a sports trip when the ‘exchange’ took place.
    • The report also implicated the gene in diabetes in an isolated population of people from Finland.
    • Such explicitly parodic celebrities implicate themselves in the culture industry's deception.
    • They've been doing everything they can since my release to somehow implicate me with this crime, which is very unethical, but they do it anyways.
    • However, the accused said he had been falsely implicated in the case.
    • The results implicate the area's wild foods, said one expert.
    • I was able to show that several had been ‘doctored’ after Mary's forced abdication to justify what her enemies had done to her, implicating her in crimes she didn't commit.
    • It took some years for her finally to break her contacts with her pimp as he and others tried to implicate her in the murders she had witnessed.
    • I know it to be true because my own father was indirectly implicated.
    • It would not, your Honour, but also, though, in the end, it would not necessarily implicate him in murder either.
    • They took a very one-sided and heavy handed approach towards implicating you in a large amount of crimes.
    • Yesterday, he also laid out an intricate plot to implicate him in his former wife's murder, stopping short of calling it political interference.
    • He is apologising to a childhood friend for implicating him in a burglary 20 years ago.
    • He never discussed actions, which would implicate him in a crime.
    • She again denied allegations implicating her in the scam.
    • Otherwise, we will never get any solution to the problem, because too many people in the legal system and in the law enforcement offices are either directly or indirectly implicated.
    • Yes, contrary to popular belief, often testing is used to exonerate or exculpate possible suspects rather than implicate.
    • That would have included evidence implicating him in murder, would it?
    Synonyms
    incriminate, compromise
    1. 1.1be implicated in Bear some of the responsibility for (an action or process, especially a criminal or harmful one)
      对…负一定责任(尤指罪行或有害行为)
      the team believes he is heavily implicated in the bombing

      工作队相信他对爆炸事件负有重大责任。

      a chemical implicated in ozone depletion

      对臭氧损耗负有一定责任的一种化学品。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The people who were implicated in major corruption scandals are still key personalities in high-level civil service.
      • At least six travel agencies had been implicated in the alleged scam.
      • If you are satisfied that he was implicated in the acts in which he is said to have been implicated, he must as completely satisfy you that he is not answer able by reason of unsoundness of mind.
      • Disturbances of normal endothelial function are strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and autoimmune vascular diseases.
      • Some Members of Parliament are being implicated in the illegal mining activities.
      • Defects in the ability of the E3 to interact with substrates have been implicated in numerous diseases, including neurodegeneration, immunological disorders, hypertension and cancers.
      • In the second series of experiments, the puppet was destroyed but was clearly out of the child's reach, therefore eliminating the possibility that the child could be implicated in the action.
      • No one was accusing me, but I'm implicated in the crime in a way that I could avoid at home - by blaming the government and the media.
      • Arbitrary arrest and detention is common and the armed forces are directly implicated in several murders.
      • Inappropriate folding of specific protein molecules is now being implicated in a number of diseases such as Alzheimer's, diabetes and many autoimmune diseases.
      • Brain regions previously implicated in the regulation of attention and impulse control contributed to these interactions.
      • But if you are implicated in the wrongdoing - especially if a hot topic like tax evasion or securities fraud is involved - then watch out.
      • You can't get a man who's clean and not a single American rider has been implicated in these latest charges.
      • Under circumstances like these, whether he was implicated in the taking was an issue of fact for the jury.
      • If you cannot tell if a brand of fresh spinach was implicated in the outbreak, and the package has a ‘use by date’ of October 1, 2006 or earlier, you should not purchase or eat it.
      • Bellbirds have been implicated in the death of swathes of forest between Victoria and Queensland.
      • No one can say for sure who was implicated to a greater degree in the riots.
      • I did indeed feel a certain admiration but it was mixed with revulsion that I was now implicated in blackmail just by knowing about it.
      • Some of America's other premier companies were also implicated in the scandal.
      • In all, 67 students were implicated in the scam that involved nearly $170,000.
      Synonyms
      involve in, concern with, associate with, connect with, tie up with
    2. 1.2US Involve (something) in a necessary way.
      cable franchise activities plainly implicate First Amendment interests
      Example sentencesExamples
      • After all, things like gender that are implicated in all social life are necessarily implicated in all social injustice.
      • This privacy interest implicates two guarantees of the Bill of Rights.
      • The nutrients most strongly implicated in asthma etiology and their putative mechanisms of action are listed in Table 1.
      • Any governmental action that interferes with the willingness of customers to purchase books, or booksellers to sell books, thus implicates First Amendment concerns.
      • The idea of crossing implicates movement in contrary or opposing directions…
  • 2with clause Convey (a meaning or intention) indirectly through what one says, rather than stating it explicitly; imply.

    暗指,暗示

    by saying that coffee would keep her awake, Mary implicated that she didn't want any

    玛丽说咖啡会让她睡不着,以此暗示她不要。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • By releasing this record, she implicates that someone, somewhere, is wringing their hands in anticipation for it.
    • Using the media richness concept implicates that the content of messages conveyed through the different electronic media should be in accordance with their specific characteristics.
    • This implicates that the man would know everything in order to be questioned by his less knowledgeable wife who would not be allowed to speak there anyway.
    • She tried to sound cheerful about it, but her undertone implicated that she wasn't looking forward to more staring and pointing from complete strangers.
    • In conclusion, the current study implicates that passive smoking in childhood has a lasting effect on the airways, increasing the risk for adult respiratory symptoms and asthma.
    • She is the walking example that being ‘physically challenged’ does not implicate that one cannot be successful.
    Synonyms
    imply, suggest, hint, intimate, say indirectly, indicate, insinuate, give someone to understand, give someone to believe, convey the impression, signal
nounˈimplikətˈɪmpləˌkeɪtˈimpləˌkātˈɪmplɪkət
Logic
  • A thing implied.

    〔主逻〕蕴(涵)之物

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This is an implicate of the inscripturation of revelation.
    • The dual nature of the Heart represents the meeting of the changeless and the changing, the inevitable and the contingent, the implicate and the manifest.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin implicatus ‘folded in’, past participle of implicare (see imply). The original sense was ‘entwine’; compare with employ and imply. The earliest modern ( implicate (sense 2 of the verb)), dates from the early 17th century.

随便看

 

英汉双解词典包含464360条英汉词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/14 5:13:00