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In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed... No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people. Preface to 1828 Dictionary
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INNUEND'O, n. [L. from innuo, to nod; in and nuo.]
An oblique hint; a remote
allusion or reference, usually derogatory to a person or thing not
named; an insinuation.
Mercury . . . owns it a marriage by an innuendo. Dryden. Pursue your trade of scandal picking; An averment employed in
pleading, to point the application of matter otherwise
unintelligible; an interpretative parenthesis thrown into quoted
matter to explain an obscure word or words; -- as, the plaintiff
avers that the defendant said that he (innuendo the plaintiff)
was a thief.
Wharton.
* The term is so applied from having been the introductory word of this averment or parenthetic explanation when pleadings were in Latin. The word "meaning" is used as its equivalent in modern forms. Syn. -- Insinuation; suggestion; hint; intimation; reference; allusion; implication; representation; -- Innuendo, Insinuation. An innuendo is an equivocal allusion so framed as to point distinctly at something which is injurious to the character or reputation of the person referred to. An insinuation turns on no such double use of language, but consists in artfully winding into the mind imputations of an injurious nature without making any direct charge. | ||||||||