Express or state indirectly.
Involve as a necessary condition of consequence; as in logic.
1 The name Operation Odyssey Dawn might connote images of a years-long military adventure.
2 The words mercy and kindness connote it less ambiguously than the word love.
3 And it must connote luxury, making it as much status symbol as vehicle.
4 They are not habitations, which connote life; they are repositories, which connote desuetude.
5 Leadership means neither selfishness nor altruism, nor does it connote wisdom.
6 Usage: frob, twiddle, and tweak sometimes connote points along a continuum.
7 Those phenomena work well for smallsats because, as their names connote , they're often bright.
8 But this does not connote the absence of love and respect for the master.
9 Hollywood directors sometimes connote the future by putting a talking machine in their movies.
10 Roughly, it may be said that all names connote their bearers, and them only.
11 Translated, these names mean simply First, Second, Third and Fourth, and they connote birth order.
12 To some, those words connote endless FarmVille clones and the moral decay of all nations.
13 For both scoring systems, higher scores connote greater adherence.
14 Wherefore it only follows that the irascible passions precede those concupiscible passions that connote rest.
15 It must connote , not denote, even the big things.
16 I take it then that these distortions seemed to connote meanings, rather than denote them.
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About this term connote
Verb
Indicative · Present