We have no meanings for "imply more" in our records yet.
1 This does not necessarily imply more risk, just a different behaviour pattern.
2 Rising yields imply more expensive mortgages that could harm recovery in U.S. housing.
3 In all, they imply more than 50 basis points of reductions by year end.
4 Somehow, the words seemed to imply more than the mere steering of a scow.
5 Otherwise, the trends of the market are going to imply more income and wealth inequality.
6 A word here and there may imply more than what those words meant to mean.
7 This position and the discussions offered to prove it imply more than has been explicitly stated.
8 I thought it had been only a joke, but so serious a question seems to imply more .
9 The other two seemed to imply more .
10 A word here and there may imply more than what those words meant to mean... poetry for Christmas.
11 A word here and there may imply more than what those words meant to mean - Federico Garcia Lorca.
12 A word here and there may imply more than what those words meant to mean... the music of poetry.
13 The Gospels do not tell us all that Christians thought of Jesus, but they imply more than they say.
14 A currency trading above that indicator encourages more buyers as it is seen to imply more gains and vice versa.
15 Additionally, a more intelligent algorithm may imply more long-term complexity cost and bug-chasing than are justified by the speed improvement.
16 A German-French deal would imply more industrial overlap, raising the risk of job cuts and forced asset sales - especially in trains.
Other examples for "imply more"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Imply more through the time