A14 A Republican ad campaign implicitly concedes a Dole defeat.
In this appeal, the Justice Department is not challenging those precedents, and in fact is implicitly conceding that without a knowledge requirement the 1977 law would be unconstitutional.
In private conversation, however, a substitute member of the Communist Party's Central Committee conceded implicitly the involuntary nature of the name changes.
When Nintendo introduced its next console, the Revolution, it avoided talking about specifications, but implicitly conceded that the machine might be less technically impressive than its competitors.
The author's insistence that the Russians were never "up to" as much in the region as Americans believed implicitly concedes that Moscow was "up to" something.
General Trubins conceded implicitly, however, that in earlier days the K.G.B. exercised surveillance over all Soviet citizens and persecuted political opponents.
He did not elaborate on those pleasures, except to concede implicitly that he had indulged his share.
A top Being executive acknowledged the problems facing the airline industry and implicitly conceded that production might have to be further slowed.
He implicitly conceded that the church had made mistakes in its handling of pedophile priests and others involved in sexual misconduct.
She implicitly concedes that men might retain a right to "discourse in learning", but never directly accepts it.