- insinuation: an indirect (and usually malicious) implication
- An innuendo is a baseless invention of thoughts or ideas. It can also be a remark or question, typically disparaging (also called insinuation), that works obliquely by allusion. ...
- Innuendo, released in 1991, is Queen's thirteenth studio album and the last to be composed entirely of new material. It is also the final studio album to be released while lead singer Freddie Mercury was still alive. ...
- Innuendo is a Malaysian band, best known for their remake of the Carefree's evergreen ballad, "Belaian Jiwa", and most recently, their 70's style single, "Only Dancin'".
- "Innuendo" is a song by English rock band Queen. It is the opening track on the 1991 album of the same name. Though credited to the whole band, the song is mainly written by Freddie Mercury, with lyrics by Roger Taylor. ...
- A derogatory hint or reference to a person or thing, especially a sexual one. An implication or insinuation
- Any image or word play that has subtle or indirect meaning. Avoid words or images that have inappropriate meanings in popular culture.
- a phrase or remark which can have a double meaning, one of which is usually uncomplimentary and possibly sexually suggestive. Innuendo compares with pun and double entendre.
- An expanded contextual meaning of allusion attributed to a statement in a social context. See also "enticement."
- Italian suppository - from Martin Ferris
- An innuendo is a slanter that works by implying what it does not actually say: "Far be it from me to call my opponent a liar."
- n., pl. -dos, -does. 1. an indirect intimation about a person or thing, esp. of a disparaging or a derogatory nature.
- a hint, indirect suggestion, or reference (often in a derogatory sense)