Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary - connote
Связанные словари
Connote
connote
transitive verb (~d; connoting) Etymology: Medieval Latin connotare, from Latin com- + notare to note Date: 1665 1. to be associated with or inseparable from as a consequence or concomitant the remorse so often ~d by guilt 2. a. to convey in addition to exact explicit meaning all the misery that poverty ~s b. to imply as a logical connotation
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1.
v.tr. 1 (of a word etc.) imply in addition to the literal or primary meaning. 2 (of a fact) imply as a consequence or condition. 3 mean, signify. Derivatives connotative adj. Etymology: med.L connotare mark in addition (as com-, notare f. nota mark) ...Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
2.
1. иметь дополнительное значение 2. вызывать смысловые ассоциации 3. разг. означать war connotes unhappiness for all —- война несет горе всем ...Новый большой англо-русский словарь
3.
v. 1) иметь дополнительное, второстепенное значение (о слове) 2) иметь дополнительное следствие (о факте и т.п.) 3) coll. означать Syn: see mean ...Англо-русский словарь
4.
(connotes, connoting, connoted) If a word or name connotes something, it makes you think of a particular idea or quality. (FORMAL) The term ‘organization’ often connotes a sense of neatness. = suggest, imply VERB: V n ...Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
5.
~ v formal if a word connotes something, it makes you think of feelings and ideas that are not its actual meaning (The word `plump' connotes cheerfulness.) (- compare denote) ...Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
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