insinuate oneself into the crowd
insinuate one's doubt of this action
He insinuated that I was lying.
insinuate doubts into sb.'s mind
insinuate oneself into sb.'s favour
She cleverly insinuated herself into his family.
he insinuated himself into the king's confidence.
I insinuated my shoulder in the gap.
Laic cry with celebrity handclasp " insinuate " .
He insinuated his doubt of the reply.
The columnist insinuated—but never actually asserted—that the candidate had underworld ties.
She intimated that she and her husband were having marital problems. Toinsinuate is to suggest something, usually something unpleasant, in a covert, sly, and underhanded manner:
Well, I may have accidentally insinuated that she is getting chubbier .
Ain't hard to tell what you are insinuating.
Okay, careful with what you're insinuating.
And I welcome any investigations into whatever Ms. Sinclair is insinuating.
" But on a Saturday night, " Slightly insinuated.
Now if you described a woman as handsome, you might be insinuating that she has manly features.
One can only gently insinuate something else into its convulsive grasp.
So gulping, insinuates that you're not really even tasting.
Let's say there's a stranger male attempting to insinuate himself with a female.
As President Brewster would go on to insinuate, enduring institutional progress takes not only knowledge, but understanding.
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