tacitly in English

adverb

in a tacit manner, without being expressed in words

Use "tacitly" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tacitly" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tacitly", or refer to the context using the word "tacitly" in the English Dictionary.

1. Sam understands tacitly . He hoists his cup saying.

2. The president has tacitly recognised the problem.

3. Tacitly, I became passionate about mental health.

4. The fiction of the cab had been tacitly abandoned.

5. He tacitly admitted that the government had breached regulations.

6. He had tacitly sanctioned repression against the opposition parties.

7. 3 He had tacitly sanctioned repression against the opposition parties.

8. Business began to wind down as men tacitly awaited the new regime.

9. Magda heard him out, smiled tacitly with peasant slyness.

10. 15 Business began to wind down as men tacitly awaited the new regime.

11. They are tacitly expected to work 10 hours a day.

12. I am only following the rules, and society tacitly approves this practice.

13. It was tacitly assumed that he would be promoted at the end of the year.

14. In algebraic logic: Variables are tacitly universally quantified over some universe of discourse.

15. Merriam-Webster defines Acquiesce as “to accept, comply, or submit tacitly or passively

16. It was tacitly assumed that such activities were for grown-ups only.

17. Morris's captaincy potential has been tacitly, but very publicly condemned by his own club.

18. It had been tacitly understood beforehand that she was get work and pay her board.

19. I don't share that optimism: the break, tacitly threatened over recent years, has been made.

20. Tacitly or explicitly, these beliefs provide your organization with guidelines and criteria for measuring success.

21. In later versions of the natural rate hypothesis, Friedman was tacitly to abandon this view altogether.

22. These criticisms of family law express beliefs about law which are tacitly underpinned by legal theory.

23. The station accused the government of either being behind the campaign or tacitly encouraging it.

24. It was in the same spirit that he had tacitly assented to Fitzpiers's domiciliation there.

25. For example, Navarro believes that piracy and counterfeiting are tacitly supported by the Chinese government.

26. And by accepting it, the believer tacitly ignores the complex social mechanisms which uphold the mistaken logic.

27. Liu Bei and Zhuge Liang combined tacitly and they become leaders Community of the political and military group.

28. And many worshipings of Achlorhydrias smoothed the fiscs tacitly the discus, legatee to the hexagonal was a skanky

29. However this may be, it is plain that the district judge must have tacitly rejected the argument.

30. And just remember, at very least tacitly, this is what we're teaching children as what they should be doing.

31. As with non-co-operative playing of the one-shot game, the tacitly collusive equilibrium still requires information. Sentencedict.com

32. Until now the judiciary have expressed their views about the tariff period, tacitly if not expressly, in confidence.

33. The concept of multiculturalism, pioneered to address accommodation of diversity within the framework of democracy, is being openly or tacitly challenged.

34. It has been assumed, tacitly and Avowedly, directly and indirectly, that the ultimate object of all Poetry is Truth

35. That the ethics of prevention trials is often a resource driven argument is tacitly assumed but rarely explicitly stated.

36. The Comintern expressed righteous indignation at such an attack, although eighteen months later it tacitly accepted all these points.

37. Acquiesce definition, to assent tacitly; submit or comply silently or without protest; agree; consent: to Acquiesce halfheartedly in a business plan

38. For example, it may become tacitly accepted practice in a market exactly to match the price changes of the largest firm.

39. Observers tacitly noted that the aircraft marked a 10/15-year lag by Soviet civil aviation compared with the West.

40. When we were alone together, we were rather shy with each other, tacitly agreeing to abandon the stand-up routine.

41. A 'sponsored' activity, an activity that for all its tacitly corrective and Admonitory content seems to have been entirely congenial to male monarchs and to the whole …

42. Acquiescent may be defined as “Resting satisfied or submissive“Disposed to acquiesce or consent tacitly“Willing to carry out the orders or wishes of another without protest”

43. Concerted practice may start from the time that one competitor publishes its own future market strategy and another competitor accepts that information expressly or tacitly

44. And by -- tacitly, all of us send our kids, or grandchildren, or nieces, or nephews, to school and tell them to learn, you know, learn what's in those schools.

45. It is sufficient, under the general regime, for another State or another international organization to accept the reservation expressly or tacitly for the author of the reservation to be considered a contracting party to the treaty.

46. At least since its 1962 adumbration by Jürgen Habermas, public sphere theory has been implicitly informed by a Westphalian political imaginary: it has tacitly assumed the frame of a bounded political community with its own territorial state.

47. This treaty provided that Maximilian's daughter Margaret should marry Charles, the dauphin of France, and have for her dowry Artois and FrancheComte, two of the provinces in dispute, while the claim of Louis on the duchy of Burgundy was tacitly admitted.

48. (51) The first word of the 1853 Switzerland is "Laugh," and since even Marguerite sometimes teasingly mocks the speaker (hers is the "Archest chin / Mockery ever ambush'd in" [lines 35-36]), he tacitly groups her with his teasing friends.

49. Until 1990, France-or, rather, much of its political class-tacitly agreed with Nobel laureate François Mauriac's famous confession: "I love Germany so much that I prefer it to be split into two parts ." ("J'aime tellement l'Allemagne que je préfère qu'il y en ait deux .")

50. The dictionary.reference.com link that you gave shows only one sense for Acquiesce: "to assent tacitly; submit or comply silently or without protest; agree; consent: [eg] to Acquiesce halfheartedly in a business plan", from which one might (but shouldn't) suppose Acquiescence is necessarily silent.However, other dictionaries, with senses like "To concur upon conviction; as, to Acquiesce in an