Definitions for connotes

connotes con·note

Spelling: [kuh-noht]
IPA: /kəˈnoʊt/

Connotes is a 8 letter English word. It's valid Scrabble word worth 9 points. It's valid Words with friends word worth 12 points.

You can make 206 anagrams from letters in connotes (cennoost).

Definitions for connotes

verb (used with object)

  1. to signify or suggest (certain meanings, ideas, etc.) in addition to the explicit or primary meaning:
  2. to involve as a condition or accompaniment:
  3. to signify or suggest (certain meanings, ideas, etc.) in addition to the explicit or primary meaning:
  4. to involve as a condition or accompaniment:

verb (used without object)

  1. to have significance only by association, as with another word:
  2. to have significance only by association, as with another word:

Origin of connotes

1645-55; Medieval Latin connotāre, equivalent to Latin con- con- + notāre to note

Examples for connotes

The names of feelings, like other concrete general names, are connotative: but they connote a mere resemblance.

But this does not connote the absence of love and respect for the master.

Rather these words should connote the strong, the self-reliant, the youthful.

To mention an industry is almost always to connote some one of the six.

But whether all terms must connote as well as denote something, has been much debated.

These words were not intended to connote a quantitative equality.

It may connote, however, some of the most essential virtues that a race can possess.

They are not habitations, which connote life; they are repositories, which connote desuetude.

It is conceivable that two men may connote quite different things by the word symbol.

The sense of possession which they connote was gone from his heart.

But this does not connote the absence of love and respect for the master.

To mention an industry is almost always to connote some one of the six.

It may connote, however, some of the most essential virtues that a race can possess.

These words were not intended to connote a quantitative equality.

The names of feelings, like other concrete general names, are connotative: but they connote a mere resemblance.

Rather these words should connote the strong, the self-reliant, the youthful.

They are not habitations, which connote life; they are repositories, which connote desuetude.

But whether all terms must connote as well as denote something, has been much debated.

It is conceivable that two men may connote quite different things by the word symbol.

The sense of possession which they connote was gone from his heart.

Word Value for connotes
Scrable

9

Words with friends

12

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