He insinuated that he was prepared to handle the responsibilities of having his own car.
Are you trying to insinuate that I may know this answer?
She tried to insinuate that I was not telling the truth, but I stood my ground.
(Insinuate : to introduce or imply gradually, or to subtly introduce oneself into an activity.) His questions about the accident seemed to insinuate that it had been my fault. She always found a way to insinuate herself into our plans.
My boyfriend tried to insinuate that I didn't care about him because I wanted to sleep instead of going out with him.
a sentence is this : an honest person does not result to insinuation.
Your spelling is correct: insinuate (to infer or suggest, or to wheedle).
Sentence: To say "Fred can't do it; no coward can" is to insinuate that Fred is a coward. (Insinuatingly is just the adverb of this verb)
"That's an interesting coat," the husband insinuated, without letting his wife know how ugly the coat really was.
No. to recommend involves praise, while to insinuate means to imply and is used in a negative sense.
The noun form for the verb to insulate is insulator. Another noun form is insulation.Read before answering Homer. The question was "insinuate" not insulate. The noun is insinuator.
Try insulate, ingratiate, appreciate, repudiate, validate, implicate, navigate, and celebrate.
There is no opposite for insinuate (imply, suggest) except to openly declare or state.However, the opposite action by the recipient would be to infer (assume an implication or insinuation).