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"connote" Definitions
  1. connote something (of a word) to suggest a feeling, an idea, etc. as well as the main meaning

117 Sentences With "connote"

How to use connote in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "connote" and check conjugation/comparative form for "connote". Mastering all the usages of "connote" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" Leisure, Veblen wrote, "does not connote indolence or quiescence.
I'd say that they bombed, except that would connote impact.
In these moments, his blankness doesn't connote confusion but hidden depths.
I think sex and affection kind of connote your relationship, singular.
A level deeper: The shift of fortunes doesn't connote an economic advance.
Opposition to America is thought to connote bad faith, even blind hatred.
Although aerial perspectives typically connote imperial authority, here the effect is vertiginous.
I think a stadium tour can connote massive, sprawling performances, but this wasn't.
"Logos and luxury iconography connote a sense of wealth and status," Nirui explained.
The "x" specifies an unknown, and is a neutral way to connote gender.
The "x" specifies an unknown, and is a neutral way to connote gender.
If anonymous sources sometimes connote the weakest journalism, other times they signal the best.
Splashes of red connote punctured flesh, and dark paint streaks downward like blood and tears.
A pardon is not a sign of vindication and does not connote or establish innocence.
The term "melting pot" has been used to connote this essential part of our character.
But these days Porsche uses the name Turbo to connote a high level of performance.
If having a beard used to connote a sense of rebellion, being clean-shaven represents compliance.
But he continued to use terms like "infest" and "breeding" that appeared to connote animal behavior.
JC Except for the pants, which connote a level of leisure I do not believe in.
"Dark" may be synonymous with "morbid" or "dark-skinned," and "black" may connote death or ethnicity.
But these inferences are too facile, because some increases connote good news, while others do not.
"They say, 'We are so against anti-Semitism,' " Krauskopf said, modulating his voice to connote spurious compassion.
"As soon as someone makes an inappropriate comment, that does not connote" criminal behavior, the attorney said.
On the internet, African-American names are more likely to be surrounded by words that connote unpleasantness.
Her campaign's oddly framed attacks on Sanders's single payer advocacy connote an urgent desire to blunt his momentum.
The wording seems to connote an attempt to save money by banking on unborns or newborns to die.
Just as higher-pitched and speedier voices connote excitement, so do higher-pitched and speedier selections of music.
"Historically, these phrases connote the celebration of cultural nationalism that took place throughout postcolonial Latin America," Dr. Ward explains.
He worked to incorporate industry taglines like First Class, Business Class, Economy Plus, and Economy to connote price points.
There is sad music, which is to say music that deploys lyrical or musical motifs meant to connote misery.
When the act of nicknaming doesn't stem from a close relationship, or the desire to connote closeness, things get trickier.
They identify their targets by placing parentheses around their names meant to connote some kind of dark, scary echo chamber.
It can connote empty shows of solidarity rather than actual work, like performatively changing a profile pic after a tragedy.
Even their mode of creation — of plant matter decaying into crepuscular peat — seems to connote darkness and hostility to life.
"It's frustrating, in many ways, to have that word, 'society,' in our name," she said, because it can connote exclusivity.
It can connote an intent to irritate: my girlfriend knows we disagree about politics, but she always davka brings it up.
Or was this a cheerful reappropriation of an identity that for so long was taken to connote stupidity and closed-mindedness?
Right down to the outfits: Black blazers connote professionalism, while bright red slacks and low-top sneakers suggest a calculated casualness.
I think I was hoping for neon stripes, a rich paisley, a garish gingham — something that would connote relaxation even from space.
"The Trump name does not connote high-quality amenities and first-class service in the casino industry," lawyers for the investment bank said.
It comes in four colors, all prepended with the word "aura" to connote that everything has a kind of iridescent shimmer to it.
More than that, it's a future in which the invocation of free speech loses its talismanic cultural power to connote neutrality, fairness, and democracy.
Today the word can tend to connote some surface-level sheen at once bold and unattainable — an antidote to gravity, artifice without the art.
Mr Almodóvar employs a palate of bright primary colours in both timelines, avoiding the sepia tones that many film-makers use to connote memory.
Glyde, a rival brand, also makes vegan condoms that are certified as Fair Trade, a designation used by manufacturers to connote sustainable farming practices.
Across the planet, the word Barcelona — the idea of Barcelona — has over the last decade come to connote not just success but beauty, too.
It may connote the nurturing environment parents create for their children to protect them from life's ugliness, or a private oasis of peace amid public chaos.
The Times notes: "Trump's behavior has so exasperated Mr. McGahn that he has called the president 'King Kong' behind his back, to connote his volcanic anger."
The look and the sound — cinematography by Lawrence Sher, cello-heavy score by Hildur Gudnadottir — connote gravity and depth, but the movie is weightless and shallow.
In Dothraki tradition, the length and ornamentation of a warrior's braid connote victories; Dany's braids have become more elaborate through the seasons and she conquers more territory.
However, their sunniness does not connote an innocent simplicity; in fact, they serve a real psychological purpose, which is to soften the harsh edges of internet life.
This notion of diversity has proved remarkably flexible, and therefore popular, especially in comparison with terms like "integration" or "racial parity," which connote conflict, rather than harmony.
Derogatory terms like ars ("thug" in Hebrew slang) and freha ("bimbo") have come to connote a kind of garish shallowness and are applied almost exclusively to Mizrahim.
It begins to accumulate the grooves and wrinkles that connote either lengthening years or deepening character, depending on your viewpoint, and also starts, almost invariably, to sag.
Manousos agrees that while their limited lifespans make luxury smartwatches a difficult proposition, they're just like wristwatches in that they can be used to connote style or individuality.
"I get why people worry about it, because if immediately you connote me with San Francisco, Nancy Pelosi, everything — I get where that anxiety comes from," he said.
In Silicon Valley the term "hacker" has evolved to connote high praise for someone particularly creative, ingenious and adept at finding clever new ways to accomplish a difficult task.
Recently, it appears to connote as much a feeling of rebellion against a security apparatus seen as operating with an unnecessarily heavy hand, as a concrete demand for nationhood.
And while Pelosi may connote liberalism to many, in much of the country, her brand is quite the opposite -- reflecting an elitism that can hurt Democrats on Election Day.
Hoyaken is stocked with magazines and bilingual glossaries of "kigo," haiku words used to connote the season like cicada for summer, scarecrow for autumn and the winter-blooming camellia.
" The computer begins to understand what the word means by noticing it occurs more frequently alongside the word "container," and near words that connote liquids like "water" or "milk.
Originally a shortened version of "mistress," the usage of which dates back centuries, "miss" has long been a term used to connote a young woman — as in an adolescent girl.
And he was always doing the most ridiculous shit, like spewing coffee from his tiny mouth or exploding an anatomically correct heart right out of his chest to connote love.
" The computer begins to understand what the word means by noticing it occurs more frequently alongside the word "container," and also near words that connote liquids like "water" or "milk.
But any original safety meaning any signal may be intended to connote is lost within Hollander's fine blending of elegant ballerina and stiff, ground marshaller choreography, which captivates through sheer repetition.
There's a quick shot of Timberlake nuzzling with Biel, whose bronzed face and quasi-cowboy hat connote the same sort of raw elemental-ness conveyed by the rest of the video.
We may have left postmodernism behind, but we are still generally suspicious of sincerity: It seems to connote naiveté, or worse, credulousness—a belief in the fundamental simplicity of the world.
"This suggests that disability classifications occur subjectively and inconsistently, which runs counter to how we perceive and act on disability labels," Shifrer said, which is that they connote a biological difference.
Norman Lewis' "Untitled (Police Beating)" from 1943 is a blurred depiction of a white policeman beating a black man in which abstract strokes connote movement, oppression, and a white onlooker's glee.
"There is little research studying how violent the toys themselves have become; that is, how the toys' design might connote, encourage or depict violence, aggression or anti-social behavior," the study says.
ONE OF THE CLICHÉS of modernity — but a cliché we nonetheless have to live through — is that new forms of technology make us nostalgic for prior ones and the eras they connote.
For this group, "guns connote … the perpetuation of illicit social hierarchies, the elevation of force over reason, and the expression of collective indifference to the wellbeing of strangers," Braman and Kahan write.
In our upside down world, where social media friends and name identification are valued as real assets and connote one's net worth, famous losers can make far more money than discreet winners.
In turn, Mr. Trump's behavior has so exasperated Mr. McGahn that he has called the president "King Kong" behind his back, to connote his volcanic anger, people close to Mr. McGahn said.
" Though the address in Malibu would seem to connote relaxation, he finds the sound of the waves below deafening: "People who live in a beach house don't know how wary it makes them.
Philipps got the show partly on the strength of her popular Instagram feed, clips from which appear in the credits, festooned with emoji and a cloud of hearts that connote Like, Like, Like.
"Investments connote money and time, and while that's needed, it has to be brought simultaneously with a mind-set change about who the party is and where its future lies," Mr. Jenkins said.
Those stick-and-carrot tactics amount to a new era of pressure politics, an explicit incentive that goes beyond the traditional "Key Vote" scoring that K Street typically uses to connote a bill's importance.
And, if one goes far enough back, the huge bellies and buttocks of the Paleolithic "Steatopygian Venus" figures that have been found across much of Europe suggest that fat can connote fertility and desirability.
This was done during the Clinton impeachment trial and doesn't necessarily connote some grand significance, but the tone and tenor of a bipartisan question may carry more weight in how it's viewed and received.
Audi managers and engineers bluntly discussed what was in effect a criminal conspiracy, using terms, like "defeat device" and "cycle beating," that clearly connote illegal attempts to defeat the testing procedures used by regulators.
Audi managers and engineers bluntly discussed what was in effect a criminal conspiracy, using terms, like "defeat device" and "cycle beating," that clearly connote illegal attempts to defeat the testing procedures used by regulators.
While 3-point shooting and defence are obviously the identifiers of the mold, it still tends to connote a standstill catch-and-shoot type, someone waved off to the corner and trusted with little else.
And while the term "skyscraper" has come to connote New York landmarks such as the Flatiron, Woolworth and Empire State buildings, it was first used to describe towers that rose on the shores of Lake Michigan.
The ancient bath's structure, with blue and gold columns and climbing vines and multicolored flora, rises all around, like a temple dedicated to herself, while red, weed-like growths connote the violence of her impending victimization.
On the outside, the wheels have plexiglass elements to echo the interior, and the side skirts have been decorated with an embossed pattern, which is supposed to connote the goosebumps you get when you're particularly excited.
Presidential candidates in both parties are delighting in slinging the words "Goldman Sachs" as political attacks, using the global bank as a two-word catchphrase to connote the dark side of politics, influence and campaign finance.
Americans have consistently indicated they want immigration laws upheld and that they oppose policies that connote open borders or appear to tolerate lawbreaking; that can be a risk for Democrats who too sweepingly criticize immigration enforcement.
Libra does not precisely say that the jig is up on the massively profitable social networking juggernaut (which remains just that), but it does connote the exact turn that other such platforms have had to take.
The prose rather reads like a '50s primer: formal, an almost affected sense of bemusement at anything improper, and peppered with antiquated words like "slithery" to describe a dress and "a real dilly" to connote something exciting.
Pete Golibersuch, Ro's VP of design, says that when his team started working on Zero's branding — which is distinct from Roman's — their early prototypes were based on blue and white color schemes meant to connote fresh air.
I learned that comfort is found not necessarily in a particular style of wine, as with my syrahs, but in what those wines connote, whether they are reminiscent of particular people or somehow represent relief from stress.
" Mr. Ries said he and Mr. Trout positioned Trump Plaza as "Atlantic City's centerpiece" in 1984 to connote its physical place on the boardwalk and the reputation of its developer, Donald J. Trump, as a "master builder.
By now, thanks to the work of musicians like Robert Glasper and Esperanza Spalding, it's harder to argue that fusing jazz with pop and funk is inherently some kind of artistic compromise, or that synthesizers connote inauthenticity.
Sharp was one of the preeminent makers of early PDAs, with its Zaurus range (pronounced "zow-rus" in Japanese, though still intended to connote the strength of a dinosaur) achieving a reasonable level of popularity around the globe.
Like some readers, I see "Western civilization" as a mixed bag, something that can connote wonderful things — like democracy and human rights — but also has historically been invoked to carry out colonial rule and exploit people of color.
" Five months later, the judge was talking to the same lawyer and allegedly made a gesture with his hand to his mouth to connote oral sex, patted the attorney lightly on the cheek and said, "There, there little boy.
It's the same desk that Fury sits at in Captain Marvel, but everything in the room, from the furniture around it to the computer on top of it to the desk itself, has been updated to connote the passage of time.
Kelton responded to Summers' jibe with a Twitter video clip from the U.S. TV sitcom "Happy Days" famous "jumping the shark" episode in 1977, which has come to connote the moment when an established phenomenon crosses into absurdity or irrelevance.
The psychology behind this is pretty interesting — how much of a better work culture you'll engender by not having this kind of shut down-shut out kind of place that email in particular, taken in the wrong context, can connote.
The violence serves as the centerpiece of the film, with Ms. Bigelow, a sharp, deft filmmaker, magnifying the horrors with extreme close-ups on the faces of the men in torment, and vérité shots to connote an air of authenticity.
And yes, it is a double album, the sort of gesture intended to connote seriousness of artistic and spiritual purpose, as well as suggesting that the font of feelings serving as inspiration is a roaring waterfall that cannot easily be contained.
It's the idea that you should come dressed up to work, but not too dressed up — that you should be judged solely on your work, but still use your clothes to connote that message — that confuses and frustrates women across the country.
One argument I saw from a number of people, including readers who work in design, is that graphic designers draw from a wide range of references and might not know exactly what the elements they're working with are meant to connote in context.
Scherzer should still be considered the leader now, not because of his record (15-5), but because he leads the N.L. in strikeouts, innings, walks-plus-hits per inning pitched and strikeout-to-walk ratio — all the categories that connote dominance and durability.
Though the word "leak" can connote passivity on the part of the person receiving the information, leaks often result from rigorous, shoe-leather reporting, by journalists who have spent time cultivating sources and building relationships with people at agencies or government organizations.
"The intent is to create a set of 40 tones, or voices, that can connote through consonance the serenity and nobility of the site while also through the dissonance recalling the event that consecrated the site," according to a description by primary architect Paul Murdoch.
"As one of the stewards for protecting and enhancing the brand, this is particularly troubling to me as the influx of these outside groups may connote to your viewers an environment of acceptance by our campus when none are actually our students or faculty," Smith said.
The three protagonists bicker to no end, and while Ilya and Gaby's playful fighting (sometimes literal wrestling) does explicitly lead to and connote romance, Ilya and Solo exhibit an almost identical tension (wrestling included) that seems hardly limited to the bromance the filmmakers might have intended.
Laurie Tansman, a nutritionist from New York who attended the FDA meeting, argued during a public comment period that redefining the "healthy" label doesn't matter much in a world where food companies can use claims like "gluten-free," which connote healthiness but don't have the same restrictions.
A couple of times they joined Ms. Del Rey at the front of the stage, and the three of them all enacted a lighthearted routine that seemed intended to connote knowledge of what's usually expected at pop concerts while being awkward enough to not deliver on the promise.
But -- besides the fact that having a "high" BMI does not disqualify anyone from suffering any form of eating disorder, and a higher weight doesn't automatically connote ill health -- for those who do fear obesity or face ill health because of it, dieting is almost certainly not the answer.
Although Jin's gurulike speech might connote Steve Jobs, and the vast arena portends a set piece like the assassination that opens Brian De Palma's "Snake Eyes," the director, Cho Ui-seok, zeros in on an audience member: Park Jang-gun (Kim Woo-bin), One Network's computer systems manager.
This all unfolds in a park whose distinguishing characteristic is a bunch of Styrofoam-looking fake rocks behind the outfield wall, for a team whose ridiculous geographic designation only distances it from both the L.A. glitz it was meant to connote and the Orange County otherness that is its actuality.
In "Music for Prague 1968," a response to the Soviet Union's crushing of the Prague Spring reform movement, he incorporated a 15th-century Hussite anthem used previously by Dvorak and Smetana to connote solidarity and resistance, alongside eerie, unsettling microtonal passages and instrumental effects evoking bird song, church bells, Morse code and gunfire.
Usually this wouldn't really be a big deal—plenty of acts have albums which share titles – but unfortunately it seems that Katy might well have been pipped in the woke stakes by Booker (though it feels unfair to use "woke," a word that's now been hijacked to almost connote a performative, borderline competitive awareness of social justice, to talk about him).
Let's say they've got some confidential information and they label it something like "dictionaries" or something boring so that if somebody gets ahold of your laptop and finds this folder they're not going to be intrigued because it's not labeled something like "love letters" or "sexts" or something like that, so there could be a masking of it as a way to connote its privacy and hiddenness in a folder with a fake name that could suggest the same kind of thing that putting a box of letters under a bed in a box might do.

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