¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Connotes
1. connote [v] - See also: connote
Lexicographical Neighbors of Connotes
Literary usage of Connotes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1910)
"27), though this generally connotes the district north and south of the Dead Sea.
The topography east and west of the Jordan above the Dead Sea is ..."
2. Aristotle by George Grote (1872)
"... as a prius natura, the complete organism whereof they are parts, and that the
name of each member connotes the performance of, or aptitude to perform, ..."
3. Elements of Logic as a Science of Propositions by Emily Elizabeth Constance Jones (1890)
"In the case of any class-name, if it is said that it connotes all the attributes
... It seems best to say that what a name connotes (what is included in its ..."
4. The Judicial Dictionary, of Words and Phrases Judicially Interpreted: To by Frederick Stroud (1903)
"Act, 1888, connotes that the " other Sufficient Cause " must be " an external
cause which would, for instance, prevent the debtor from exercising his ..."
5. Natural Law in Terrestrial Phenomena: A Study in the Causation of by William Digby (1902)
"... How it may be Accurately Forecasted—Achievement in Prediction The Facile Term '
Weather ' : what it connotes. ' As Changeable as the Weather' represents ..."