denotative in English
adjective
indicating, representing, signifying
Use "denotative" in a sentence
1. Denotative and Connotative meanings
2. Phraseology meaning includes Connotative meaning and denotative meaning
3. Specific or direct: denotative and Connotative meanings
4. 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)
5. Connotative meanings of a word exist together with the denotative meanings
6. Herodotus, like Homer, has a denotative as well as a Connotative use
7. For example, the words childish, childlike and youthful have the same denotative, but different Connotative, meanings
8. Synonyms for Connotative include hinting, implying, meaning, referring, suggesting, indicatory, indicative, suggestive, denotative and significant
9. Connotative (comparative more Connotative, superlative most Connotative) that implies or suggests something else Antonym: denotative; Derived terms
10. Connotation refers to the emotional implications and associations that a word may carry, in contrast to its denotative (or literal) meanings
11. 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
12. 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
13. 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
14. 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.
15. 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.
16. ‘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.’
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.’