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Definition of Connotatively
1. adv. In a connotative manner; expressing connotation.
Definition of Connotatively
1. Adverb. In a connotative manner. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Connotatively
1. [adv]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Connotatively
Literary usage of Connotatively
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Logic, Deductive and Inductive by Carveth Read (1898)
"... but in Logic it is often better to treat it as a general name used connotatively
for the attributes possessed in common by the things denoted, ..."
2. A Treatise on Logic: Or, The Laws of Pure Thought; Comprising Both the by Francis Bowen (1895)
"We then think of it only connotatively, — only as a Mark. But it is still true
that we originally learned the meaning of the word white not only as a Mark ..."
3. Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology: Including Many of the Principal by James Mark Baldwin (1901)
"... stood primarily for a quality; secondarily, or connotatively, for the subject
ofthat quality. (2) Modern logicians, following JS Mill, ..."
4. Thought and Things: A Study of the Development and Meaning of Thought, Or by James Mark Baldwin (1908)
"An object, intension taken individually or connotatively, may vary in u Abstract.
tne marks or characters with reference to which it is selected or made up. ..."
5. Reading in Public Schools by Thomas Henry Briggs, Lotus Delta Coffman (1911)
"In like manner Keats appeals connotatively to all who have any poetry in their
beings when he writes of the nightingale's song: ..."
6. Elements of Deductive Logic by Noah Knowles Davis (1894)
"Here animal is first a mark, then a concept. The distinction consists in the use
made of the notion. If used connotatively, the notion is a mark; ..."