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He explicitly implied he was considering running on Charlemagne's show. Wouldn't mean much for most people but Jon has always aggressively shut down any such suggestion and here he brought it up.
Choose one
Go watch the clip. In the context of Jon Stewart it's weird. He hasn't given the idea serious thought since the rally to restore sanity in ancient times.
Even Jon Stewart cannot defy the rules of logic.
Either he explicitly said "I am running for president" or he implied it by saying something other than "I am running for president."
"I'm not saying I'm running for president but I'm not not saying that, if you know what I mean"
(haven't seen the clip, just postulating)
That's not explicit. At most, it strongly implies he's running.
Pretty much whenever someone ends a sentence with "if you know what I mean", they are implying something.
It’s not about him actually running. It’s about him considering. You’re jumping ahead.
He’s never considered it an option before. But now he’s considering it.
Either way, he is either explicitly considering it or he implied that he's considering it.
It's not explicitly saying X, it's explicitly implying X. Really being explicit that they're implying the thing.
You can't explicitly imply something. You can either imply or be explicit.
Our understanding of how words work is different and that is ok. We've clearly communicated how we each interpret the phrase, so there's no misunderstanding in this case and we are unlikely to encounter the same phrase together again in the wild.
edit: root disagreement is that you believe the adverb "explicitly" cannot modify the verb "imply", whereas I believe it can. I doubt either of us will convince the other.
"Explicit" is literally defined as "fully revealed or expressed without vagueness, implication"
Which makes sense, because "explicit" and "implicit" are antonyms. Do you think that something can "explosively implode"?