Posted by Jay Livingston
Language prescriptivists – the people who tell us when our choice of words is wrong – are always on the losing side historically. Words come to mean what people use them to mean regardless (or irregardless) of what experts say. But sometimes the fuddy-duddies have a point.
Infer/Imply. These words often appear on lists of terms that people misuse. To imply is to suggest something indirectly. To infer is to draw a conclusion from the available information. Most of the time, you can figure out from context what the speaker or writer really meant. Nevertheless, the distinction between the two words can be important.
Look at the this sentence in a story today at the Independent Journal Review, a right-leaning news site, (here):
(Click on the image for a larger view.)
(The link at “heavily inferred” does not go to a language Website.)
At first, I thought that Comey, using his powers of deduction and the information available at the FBI, had concluded that the special counsel was conducting an obstruction investigation. But no, what the writer meant, I think, was that Comey had implied that the special counsel was investigating possible obstruction of justice.
The distinction is relevant. As written, the sentence means that Comey didn’t know and was just guessing. But if the writer meant imply rather than infer, it means Comey already knew and was dropping a big hint to the committee and to the world. That’s especially important because the main Republican talking point is that there is no case for obstruction.
Now that we’ve cleared that up, maybe someone will explain why imply doesn’t rhyme with simply.
1 comment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zu-3AuXrFsY
Post a Comment