Answer:
Powers not specifically granted to congress in the constitution but suggested by the powers written there are called implied powers.
Step-by-step explanation:
The theory of implicit powers is a legal principle of the United States, later adopted also in international law by the United Nations. It consists in the exercise of some bodies of powers not expressed but inferred by logical operations.
In the United States this theory was first expressed by Alexander Hamilton on February 23, 1791; it is applied to the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States, in particular to extend the powers of this court to the courts of the individual federal states where they are not constitutionally provided.