Most of you out there have probably heard of the word imply but have you ever thought about the scenarios the word can be used for? One scenario, for example, is when a fly implied that mosquitoes are flies to its mosquito friend. Now the word imply here means that you suggest something logical or truthful. So, when I use the word, Implication in a different scenario, it should make sense.
I walked down the alleyway at night when I saw a lonely cat sitting there, waiting to be rescued. I picked up the kitten, his fur all wet, and his teeth half-rotten. I immediately took him to a local veterinarian to get him checked. But then I saw a group of feral stray dogs waiting to ferociously attack the cat. The cat was scared already as it was. So, I sold it to a kid that had been longing for a new pet. I thought the cat would be happy, but it seemed to imply that I was letting it be kidnapped and kept looking at me with its paws out.
This shows that the cat is suggesting to itself that it's getting kidnapped and the guy who found him can't do anything about it. That's what implication is: a process implying.