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Also used to connote very high quality, or the best one among a group.
Everything, the artist points out, has the power to connote.
And he had been, if not in the manner the words connoted.
He turned his thoughts away from war and all it connoted.
More important, it connotes a person with a sense of history and culture, who is clear on his or her background.
And others say that no tense at all can be connoted.
It connoted the solidarity of the people as a nation.
A basic woman, yet there was something about her that connoted strength.
They are also uniforms, connoting a high degree of function.
He needed a girl whose arms connoted vast experience on the squash team.
As such, it now connotes any activity performed by military personnel.
It is bad in most cases and connotes sadness or mourning.
They will probably never connote the golden good life that California has marketed.
Vice president once connoted a senior officer, one of a handful.
Terror was still a name for intense fear, but it no longer connoted a social force.
In some countries, the term "government" connotes only the executive branch.
"Method" connotes a way of doing something - a procedure.
Instead, he spoke up for "family planning," which connotes the opposite.
Instead, other terms are employed that connote a similar sense of personal and political development proceeding together over time.
To most philosophers, the word "consciousness" connotes the relationship between the mind and the world.
It does not connote any change in family status.
A specific time connotes authority, which I will not abdicate.
Blue is nearly everybody's favorite color, connoting trustworthiness, he said.
"I thought it would be a bad idea to wear this," he said, since bamboo connotes China.
It now also connotes seven beautiful things as the island's tourist attractions.