Having the power of implying or suggesting something in addition to what is explicit.
1 We now return to the division of terms into connotative and non-connotative.
2 The turbulent voices, even Guy Pollock being connotative beside her, were nothing.
3 With the most connotative words at your command describe the following:
4 A term which possesses both extension and intension, distinct from one another, is connotative .
5 To use the phraseology of Harvard and Radcliffe, the Sulphite is connotative , the Bromide denotative.
6 The other kind of singular terms, namely, designations (§ 113) are obviously connotative .
7 Give six instances each of connotative and non-connotative terms.
8 The workings of my thought thus determine both its denotative and its connotative significance more fully.
9 Many of our own family names are obviously connotative in their origin, implying either some personal peculiarity, e.g.
10 The division of terms into connotative and non-connotative is based on their possession of one quantity or two.
11 Yet no one ever saw these officers, all of whom had names connotative of wealth and financial responsibility.
12 They are therefore connotative .
13 The question, however, whether a term is connotative or not, has to be decided, not by its origin, but by its use.
14 The very word harmony which we use to denote the first mode is itself connotative of a way of being affected, of being moved emotionally.
15 Connotative and Non-Connotative Terms.
16 We now return to the division of terms into connotative and non-connotative.
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Translations for connotative