See also: Connotative Connotation Connotatively Denotative The Connection Conniving Connected Connoisseur Conniption Connote Connive Connectivity Connector Connectedness Connective
1. Adjective (of a word or expression) signifying or suggestive of an associative or secondary meaning in addition to the primary meaning: His singing voice can best be described by the Connotative …
Can, Connotative
2. Examples of Connotative in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web That may be because the Connotative force of the word is outstripping the academic meaning of the word
Connotative
3. The Connotative meaning of a word includes the feelings and ideas that people may connect with that word.
Connotative, Connect
4. Herodotus, like Homer, has a denotative as well as a Connotative use
Connotative
5. The " whole " (omne) of the dictum, the major term, ceases to be taken in extension, and becomes intensive or Connotative, and the inference consists in subsuming the minor under (bringing it into connexion with) the major.
Ceases, Connotative, Consists, Connexion
6. When the positive is Connotative, so is the corresponding negative, for the non-possession of an attribute is itself an attribute.
Connotative, Corresponding
7. The avant-garde is a connotation, every act here is a Connotative value
Connotation, Connotative
8. The whole series of avant-garde movements do not signify, and yet their concepts are reconnotation. Images & Illustrations of Connotative Popularity rank by frequency of use
Concepts, Connotative
9. Connotative Word Meaning Connotation refers to a meaning suggested or implied by the use of a particular word, beyond it's literal (denotative) meaning. Connotation impacts how readers perceive the overall meaning of what a writer or speaker is trying to communicate.
Connotative, Connotation, Communicate
10. For example, the words childish, childlike and youthful have the same denotative, but different Connotative, meanings
Childish, Childlike, Connotative
11. Connotative: 1 adj having the power of implying or suggesting something in addition to what is explicit Synonyms: connotational , Connotative of of or relating to a connotation implicative , suggestive tending to suggest or imply inferential derived or capable of being derived by inference intensional used of the set of attributes that
Connotative, Connotational, Connotation, Capable
12. ‘A focus on language, Connotative and denotative meaning, is especially important in the cultural adaptation process.’ ‘His lectures were rhetorical, emotive and Connotative.’ ‘‘Think of all the sexually Connotative songs you know,’ said a pal.’
Connotative, Cultural
13. In line with the submission of Adegbija, some of the meanings of the word can easily be decoded through the primary layer (literal) of meaning, while others can only be understood by making recourse to the secondary layer (Connotative) of meaning
Can, Connotative
14. But Connotative meanings are context-dependent, i.e
Connotative, Context
15. Connotative meaning, on the other hand, contains qualitative judgments and personal reactions
Connotative, Contains
16. Words like honest, competent, cheap, sincere, etc., are Connotative by nature.
Competent, Cheap, Connotative
17. ‘A focus on language, Connotative and denotative meaning, is especially important in the cultural adaptation process.’ ‘His lectures were rhetorical, emotive and Connotative.’ ‘‘Think of all the sexually Connotative songs you know,’ said a pal.’
Connotative, Cultural
18. Ultimately, Connotative language is a gateway to the world of non-literal storytelling
Connotative
19. Props serve as perfect instruments for translating Connotative meaning
Connotative
20. Put more broadly: figurative language often functions at the Connotative level, and involve writers mixing connotations across words, or using the connotations of one word or image to create a new understanding of a different word or image
Connotative, Connotations, Create
21. Typically, the Connotative meaning of a word has more of an emotional association and is more likely to trigger an emotional response than the denotative meaning
Connotative
22. Connotative definition: having the power of implying or suggesting something in addition to what is explicit synonyms: suggestive, inferential, Connotative of
Connotative
23. Connotative words are the suggested meaning, the implied meaning in other words
Connotative
24. Connotative: Having the quality of connoting; implying an attribute while denoting a subject: applied to any term which connotates or connotes anything, In whatever sense those verbs may be used.
Connotative, Connoting, Connotates, Connotes
25. Connotative language lands with an emotional punch, be it positive or negative, whereas denotative words try as hard as possible to be devoid of emotion
Connotative
26. Connotative language also has a personal and geographical character
Connotative, Character
27. There are groups of people who attribute the same Connotative meaning to a word, either by common experiences or by a common region characteristic
Connotative, Common, Characteristic
28. In the literary figures, many examples of Connotative language can be found.
Connotative, Can
29. Connotative language uses positive, negative, or neutral emotional associations with words to bring deeper meaning to a word or phrase than its literal translation.
Connotative
30. Similar: connotational; Connotative of (of or relating to a connotation)
Connotational, Connotative, Connotation
31. You will be able to distinguish between the denotative (dictionary) meaning of a word and its Connotative (emotions or associations that are implied rather than literal) meaning.
Connotative
32. Denotative and Connotative meanings
Connotative
33. Phraseology meaning includes Connotative meaning and denotative meaning
Connotative
34. The abundance content and Connotative meaning of Tarkovsky's movie view is very helpful for us
Content, Connotative
35. Connotative (comparative more Connotative, superlative most Connotative) that implies or suggests something else Antonym: denotative; Derived terms
Connotative, Comparative
36. The Connotative vs Denotative meaning of words matters and these definitions and examples will help you choose your words for maximum impact as an emerging l
Connotative, Choose
37. Connotative versus denotative meaning Connotative meaning refers to the associations, overtones, and feel which a concept has, rather than what it refers to explicitly (or denotes, hence denotative meaning)
Connotative, Concept
38. Connotative meaning is often researched using the semantic differential, based in part on the phenomenon of
Connotative
39. The actual meaning of the word is its denotation, whereas all other words and objects that come to mind refer to its Connotative meaning
Come, Connotative
40. Connotative meanings of a word exist together with the denotative meanings
Connotative
41. Connotative Meaning is the meaning of a symbol that is personal to an individual and not shared
Connotative
42. Synonyms for Connotative include hinting, implying, meaning, referring, suggesting, indicatory, indicative, suggestive, denotative and significant
Connotative
43. The Connotative meaning is widely understood as the underlining meaning and the imaginative aspect and everything else associated with it
Connotative
44. When we think or feel and hear or see a word, Connotatively, it is often subjectively used between different genders and across different cultures and has many different personal emotionally associated
Connotatively, Cultures
45. Our Figurative, Connotative, and Technical Meanings lesson plan teaches students about different forms of figurative, Connotative, and technical language
Connotative
46. Connotative Words Examples of how words with similar meanings can have positive, neutral or negative connotations (feelings)
Connotative, Can, Connotations
47. Specific or direct: denotative and Connotative meanings
Connotative
48. Synonyms for Connotative of in Free Thesaurus
Connotative
49. 1 synonym for Connotative of: connotational
Connotative, Connotational
50. What are synonyms for Connotative of?
Connotative
CONNOTATIVE [ˈkänəˌtādiv]
Denotation meant the literal meaning of the word, whereas connotation is the figurative meaning of the word. The actual meaning of the word is its denotation, whereas all other words and objects that come to mind refer to its connotative meaning.
connotational; connotative of (of or relating to a connotation) implicative ; suggestive (tending to suggest or imply) inferential (derived or capable of being derived by inference)
The definition of connotative is describing or suggesting something by using an implication or making an association. An example of connotative is saying a soup is "hot as a pistol.". YourDictionary definition and usage example.
Connotation is an additional meaning for a word or phrase; thus, the examples are endless. As mentioned, many words will share the same literal meaning, but may connote different feelings or ideas. Below are several examples: Stench, smell, aroma, scent, odor. Strong, tough, sturdy, hard.