implicit

adjective

im·​plic·​it im-ˈpli-sət How to pronounce implicit (audio)
1
a
: capable of being understood from something else though unexpressed : implied
an implicit assumption
Still another problem for Middle America was how corporations … were allowed to breach the implicit social contract of the postwar era.Kevin Phillips
compare explicit sense 1a
b
: present but not consciously held or recognized
implicit attitudes
implicit racism
see also implicit bias
2
: not lessened by doubt : absolute, complete
There's an implicit trust between them.
The implicit confidence that her destiny must be one of luxurious ease …George Eliot
3
a
: involved in the nature or essence of something though not revealed, expressed, or developed : potential
… a sculptor may see different figures implicit in a block of stone.John Dewey
… made a deepfake video to demonstrate the dangers implicit in the technology.Andrea Bellemare
b
of a mathematical function : defined by an expression in which the dependent variable and the one or more independent variables are not separated on opposite sides of an equation compare explicit sense 4
implicitly adverb
implicitness noun

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Implicit With a Preposition

Implicit is often followed by a preposition, and that preposition is usually in:

"American Horror Story" is a pretty grisly show. No one should be too surprised by that revelation — it’s sort of the promise implicit in its name, after all.
—Lacy Baugher, The Baltimore Sun, 3 Nov. 2016

On less frequent occasions, implicit may be followed by from, with, or within:

[S]uch a ruling seemed implicit from Fullam’s comments.
—Sean O’Sullivan, The News Journal (Wilmington, DE), 4 October 2006

Implicit with the discovery of oil was the hard truth that it wasn't going to last forever.
—Warren Jones et al., Alaska Dispatch News, 1 June 2016

Russia's president was explicit, calling on the West to pressure Kiev to deliver results. Implicit within that was a threat: that Moscow will not play along with the talks forever.
—Sarah Rainsford, BBC News, 14 Aug. 2016

The black dead ocean looked like a mirror of the night; it was cold, implicit with dread and death…
—Norman Mailer, The Naked and the Dead, 1948

Examples of implicit in a Sentence

This assumption, implicit in innumerable statements by President Reagan … dictates most of our current political and military programs. Henry Steele Commager, Atlantic, March 1982
… in the best stories the end is implicit from the beginning. Joan Aiken, The Writer, May 1968
The goodness and strength implicit within Pen unfold but slowly. John DeBruyn, LIT, Spring 1966
The movies borrowed from other arts on the way to finding methods implicit in their medium. Bernard DeVoto, The World of Fiction, 1950
There is a sense of moral duty implicit in her writings. I have implicit trust in her honesty.
Recent Examples on the Web Almost 200 years ago, Alexis de Tocqueville spoke of the importance of social capital—the implicit community and neighborly trust that undergirds the fabric of American society and how respect for the rule of law rather than the law of rulers underlies our market economy and social harmony. Steven Tian, Fortune, 29 Oct. 2024 And the variable interest model in particular is extremely complicated and detailed and requires a lot of judgment, not just around explicit financial interests, but implicit financial interests, relationships with related parties and the like. Tax Notes Staff, Forbes, 29 Oct. 2024 During his first term, Trump argued that the act also gives the president the implicit power to dissolve a national monument. Vox Staff, Vox, 24 Oct. 2024 Everyday photography, with its implicit emphasis on what recurs, makes enjoying the passage of time a little easier. Joshua Rothman, The New Yorker, 22 Oct. 2024 See all Example Sentences for implicit 

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'implicit.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from French & Medieval Latin; French implicite, going back to Middle French, "complicated, tangled," borrowed from Medieval Latin implicitus "involved, complicated, implied," going back to Latin, "involved, intricate," variant past participle of implicāre "to fold about itself, entwine, involve" — more at implicate

Note: The Latin verb implicāre has, along with other derivatives of -plicāre, two possible past participles; see note at explicit.

First Known Use

1613, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of implicit was in 1613

Dictionary Entries Near implicit

Cite this Entry

“Implicit.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/implicit. Accessed 4 Nov. 2024.

Kids Definition

implicit

adjective
im·​plic·​it im-ˈplis-ət How to pronounce implicit (audio)
1
: understood though not put clearly into words
an implicit agreement
2
: being without doubt : absolute, complete
implicit trust
implicitly adverb
implicitness noun

Legal Definition

implicit

adjective
im·​plic·​it im-ˈpli-sət How to pronounce implicit (audio)
: capable of being recognized though unexpressed : implied
implicitly adverb

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