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implicate

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implicate

Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++im·pli·cate /ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ ●○○ AWL verb [transitive]  1 SHOW/BE A SIGN OFto show or suggest that someone is involved in a crime or dishonest act 表明[暗示]〔某人〕与〔犯罪或不诚实行为〕有牵连 The allegations implicated Abe to such an extent he was forced to resign. 安倍深受指控牵连,不得不辞职。implicate somebody in something Three police officers are implicated in the cover-up. 三名警察涉嫌隐瞒事实。2 SHOW/BE A SIGN OF formal if something is implicated in something bad or harmful, it is shown to be its cause 说明〔某物〕导致〔不好或有害的事〕be implicated in something Viruses are known to be implicated in the development of some cancers. 已知病毒是诱发一些癌症的原因。nGrammar Implicate is usually passive in this meaning.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
implicateScience vainly struggles to keep up, offering hypotheses implicating all manner of causes and suggesting all manner of effects.Seafood is increasingly implicated as the source of the hepatitis A virus.Also, it was bound to implicate Government deeply.According to the prosecution, DNA tests 'irrefutably' implicate Henson.She is claiming that the police are deliberately trying to implicate her.She had always been suspicious of Taczek, and here was yet more evidence implicating him with people she no longer trusted.Certainly he refused to implicate himself in the development of a theory in which he had played so great a part.Simon knew he couldn't possibly provide a blood sample without implicating himself.The managing director of the bank was implicated in a fraud scandal.Sexually transmitted diseases have long been implicated in infertility.Five others who had been implicated, including the head of National Security, were not prosecuted, allegedly due to political considerations.New evidence implicates Mr Stapleton and his wife in the blackmail attempt.implicate somebody in somethingThe suspect implicated two other men in the robbery.be implicated in somethingIt is not easy to find out which substrate molecule is implicated in a particular phenotypic or functional change, if any.A third illustration is asbestos manufacture, which is implicated in fatal illness amongst employees and others.The data presented here suggest that social network structure is implicated in processes of linguistic change in at least two ways.If they were implicated in the cover-up it seemed inconceivable that the President had been unaware of what was going on.And then I would be implicated in the evil, too.Jim McDermott, D-Wash., after he was implicated in the leaking of a taped telephone conversation, Rep.Other cultural risk factors, such as role conflicts experienced by women, may also be implicated in the pathogenesis of anorexia nervosa.Otherwise the faithful were implicated in the suffering of the poor.
Origin implicate (1400-1500) Latin past participle of implicare to twist together, make complicated
im·pli·cate verbn GRAMMAR1LDOCE OnlineChineseSyllable
or suggest to in is Corpus someone that show involved


implicate
implicate AC /ˈɪmpləkeɪt, ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ verb [transitive]
 Word Family: verb: implicate; noun: implication
 Date: 1400-1500
 Language: Latin
 Origin: past participle of implicare 'to twist together, make complicated'
1. to show or suggest that someone is involved in a crime or dishonest act:
    The allegations implicated Abe to such an extent he was forced to resign.
    implicate somebody in something
    Three police officers are implicated in the cover-up.
2. [usually passive] formal if something is implicated in something bad or harmful, it is shown to be its cause
    be implicated in something
    Viruses are known to be implicated in the development of some cancers.


im·pli·cate AW BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ 🔊NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they implicate BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪt/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it implicates BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪts/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪts/ 🔊past simple implicated BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪd/ 🔊past participle implicated BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪd/ 🔊 -ing form implicating BrE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈɪmplɪkeɪtɪŋ/ 🔊~ sb (in sth) to show or suggest that sb is involved in sth bad or criminal 牵涉,涉及(某人) SYN incriminate He tried to avoid saying anything that would implicate him further. 他尽力避免说出任何会进一步牵连他的事情。🔊🔊~ sth (in/as sth) to show or suggest that sth is the cause of sth bad 表明(或意指)…是起因The results implicate poor hygiene as one cause of the outbreak. 这些结果说明卫生条件差是疾病爆发的一个原因。🔊🔊be implicated in sthto be involved in a crime; to be responsible for sth bad 与某罪行有牵连;对某坏事有责任Senior officials were implicated in the scandal. 一些高级官员受到这一丑闻的牵连。🔊🔊