Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The word "Cat" in the title is connotatively used in place of "Cool."
Left at the altar by the adjective sexual , the innocent intercourse - standing by itself - is connotatively damaged goods.
That might refer connotatively to the Malevolent (Ardha Yakșa) side of Sūniyam Deviyo.
From this perspective, the subtext of such images, though still connotatively open to interpretation, has been somewhat restrained by familiarity, predominant cultural beliefs regarding the Holocaust, and perhaps by overusage.
Rockism is therefore not a connotatively neutral term; as music writer Ned Raggett writes, "You're not going to find anyone arguing FOR [rockism] any time soon, or at least coming out and saying so-but that's precisely because of the terms of the discourse."
That curious concept of 'squaw', the enslaved, demeaned, voiceless childbearer, existed and exists only in the mind of the non-Native American and is probably a French corruption of the Iroquois word otsiskwa [also spelled ojiskwa] meaning 'female sexual parts', a word almost clinical both denotatively and connotatively.
The concepts of name and identifier are denotatively equal, and the terms are thus denotatively synonymous; but they are not always connotatively synonymous, because code names and ID numbers are often connotatively distinguished from names in the sense of traditional natural language naming.