(1) Implied though not directly expressed; inherent in the nature of something
(2) Implied though not directly expressed
(3) Inherent in the nature of something
(4) Ambiguous
(1) Yet such reasoning is exceptional: most of the reasoning that gives us knowledge is largely inexplicit .
(2) In an article that is to be followed by a book, Searle has tentatively added Free Will to his previous philosophy of mind, which was inexplicit but which seemed deterministic.
(3) Chardin was a specialist in still life, a mode that was either inexplicit or lacked outright story content.
(4) This inexplicit though frank play presents itself as a coming-out drama.
(5) I feel though that this experiment is incomplete and requires further knowledge due to the inexplicit fact that this is in fact only one group of specimens dubbing it as a theory.
(6) She was already using female sexuality to question the conventions of novelistic discourse where sexuality was traditionally inexplicit .
(7) What they say, however, has been for the most part unclear, ill-focused, and unduly inexplicit .
(8) This tone can be arch, infuriating, inexplicit , and baffling.
(9) Marx's vision is insistently comprehensive, relating all matters by implication to its political agenda; yet his remarks on aesthetic matters are few and inexplicit , leaving a kind of lacuna in his system.
(10) The key is to be as truthful, yet as inexplicit as you can be.
(11) For those analysts who like their policies neat, inexplicitness becomes a bit tortuous.
(12) Additional factors such as repetition, linguistic competence, cultural schemata, and transfer also contribute to the different levels of inexplicitness .
implicit
clear
definite
explicit
specific
Explicit