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Infer and Imply

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by Tina Blue

The best way to remember the difference between these two words is to think in terms of the model used by communications theorists.
Communication consists of a
message, a sender, and a receiver.
The
sender can imply, but the receiver can only infer.
The error that usually occurs is that the word
infer is mistakenly used for imply. 

WRONG:  Are you inferring that I am a fool?
RIGHT:   Are you implying that I am a fool?

If someone gets the idea from your behavior that you are a fool, then he is inferring  that you are a fool. But if he is subtly letting you know that he thinks so, then he is implying that you are a fool. You, of course, can infer from his implication that he thinks you are a fool.
IMPLY = to put the suggestion into the message (sender implies)
INFER = to take the suggestion out of the message (receiver infers) 

IMPLICATION = what the sender has implied
INFERENCE = what the receiver has inferred



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