You seem to imply -- and maybe I misheard -- that the leaks were a threat to national security, but that it would not impact foreign policy.
In an industry rightly obsessed with safety, it is in nobody's interest to imply -- even subtly -- that another's product comes with any risk to passengers.
Now, though, Google puts forth that a well-written Ice Cream Sandwich app should run well -- (does that imply scale?) -- on smartphones and tablets (as well as TVs).
But two modish economic ideas, which imply that high-tech industries create special antitrust worries, have also attracted the interest of antitrust people.
Marvin Gaye, Bob Dylan - the best ones, you know, the ones that really were - imply something specific, but don't trap themselves in that, you know, the tar pit of that moment.
In your research, did you get the impression that he - you seemed to imply it before but I want to ask it more directly - that he was truly mentally ill?
What would such a prospect imply for a still-fragile economic recovery?
These studies imply that since high-income people respond to changing tax rates by reporting less income, raising their taxes is an inefficient way for the government to raise revenue.
But his results imply that a two-person household headed by a man of 50 living on a farm in the south needs 4.6 times as much spending as a three-person family headed by a 30-year-old woman living in a city in the west.
She and Coz had talked at length about why she kept the stolen objects separate from the rest of her life: because using them would imply greed or self-interest, because leaving them untouched made it seem as if she might one day give them back, because piling them in a heap kept their power from leaking away.
Interestingly, the tone of an article in today's FT by Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the IMF, seems to imply that stimulating short-term growth is now perceived by the IMF to be more important than immediate deficit reduction - which is not quite the same message as that of the British Chancellor, George Osborne, in his newspaper article of the previous day.
On the other hand, the majors' strengthening of the hub-and-spoke networks (by which travelers go from A to B via a hub in airport C) imply that entry into new markets -- what in the industry is called "city-pairs" -- is relatively simple.
As it happens, the stress-test results imply that if a default were confined to Greece, it would be painful for some banks but not devastating for the integrity of the European financial system.
BBC: Stress-test message to banks: Prepare for possible Greek default - BBC News
Talking of contentious issues, having spoken to a senior DUP figure I suspect any changes in education will be more gradual than some of the recent newspaper headlines about bringing back the 11-plus would imply.
Although it is doubtful whether all Mr Clinton's new spending initiatives make sense, this proposed path for discretionary spending at least does not imply swingeing (and short-sighted) cuts in an area that has probably been squeezed enough.
Now these are the kinds of profits that banks should not really like to make - because they imply that conditions in financial markets have become more stressed and that the price of debt issued by banks has been falling.
Indeed, emerging-market bond prices fell sharply last week (and more sharply, be it noted, than the Treasury market) when the Federal Reserve changed its language to imply that it might raise short-term rates sooner than previously thought.
But the senators were disingenuous in exhorting their audiences to "demand presidential leadership" to avoid falling off the fiscal cliff in January -- and wrong to imply that the president has been AWOL on the issue, leaving national security and jobs at risk.
Given that Comcast has close to 22 million pay-TV subscribers, 2.4 billion hours imply that each Comcast customer is on an average watching over 9 hours of on-demand video every month.
"It is wrong to imply that somehow pupils are being short-changed when supply staff are employed, " she said.
Population science is once more centre-stage, pushed by climate change, which raises worries about the impact so many billions have on the environment of the earth, and food-price spikes, which imply doubts about whether it will be possible to feed them all.
While the base model comes with a 385-horsepower 5.0-liter V-8, the XJL Supercharged we tested included (as the name would imply) a heartier supercharged version that generates 470 horsepower and 424 pound-feet of torque.
FORBES: 2011 Jaguar XJL Supercharged Review: The Cat Pounces
As their price tags imply, these are Sony's top-of-the-line consumer offerings for 2013, and they've got the features to match.
ENGADGET: Sony Handycam PJ790V and PJ650V get brighter projectors with HDMI input, we go hands-on
Even a very conservative estimate of price elasticity (-0.1) would imply a 10% decline in volume in 2013 due to the base effect.
The year-end estimates by each company imply that Sirius expects to add another 1.6 million subs in the second half of the year and that XM hopes to add between 800, 000 and 1.2 million new customers.
When two Democratic political consultants accused Arianna Huffington, in a lawsuit, of cheating them out of credit for their role in launching the Huffington Post, her ultra-dismissive response was meant to imply their claims were based on nothing more than envy.
FORBES: Inside the Legal Battle Over the Huffington Post's Origins
They imply that lawyers' objections are motivated by self-preservation as much as by ethical scruples.
Pinnacle said in its prospectus that it is targeting an 18-cent quarterly dividend, which would imply a 3.6% annual yield based on the offer price.
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