Insinuating in a sentence as an adjective

They guy was clearly insinuating that Google was being racist.

I'm not insinuating we should now start lynching AT&T employees, since we can't get at the bigger fish.

> this article is insinuating that Dropbox has full access to your dataThey do.

In his blog post, he is insinuating that you are still a normal, living, conscious human being.

You're insinuating that if obstacle1 disagrees with you then they are either ignorant or lying about their experience.

Look at what is happening in this thread: people are complaining about his tone, complaining about his word choice, and insinuating that he's making things up.

Please apologize for insinuating the author is a mysogynist.

Either you're insinuating that 'tptacek is a malicious actor, or that he's incompetent.

By establishing extroversion and median IQ as "ideal," we're insinuating that the introverted and gifted are somehow defective.

How can she declare victory for Android when WP7 has been barely out 5 months yet?Interesting to see that she sweeps under the carpet things like Apple filing patent lawsuits against Android phones, and Jobs insinuating that Android is for porn.

Seeing such immature behavior coming from their corporate blog--calling him an "*******", saying he should be fired, insinuating that they wish they could kick him out of the project--has pretty much destroyed the respect I had for the company.

Insinuating definitions

adjective

calculated to please or gain favor; "a smooth ingratiating manner"

See also: ingratiating ingratiatory