Sentence examples for a strong connotation of from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

He argues specifically that, in the 1740s, the term had a strong connotation of an imported vice; it was often used in the 1740s to connote suspicion against foreigners.

It is also related to the adjective aṣḥar, meaning desertlike and carrying a strong connotation of the reddish colour of the vegetationless plains.

The adjective obscene, rooted in ancient words for "filth," has a strong connotation of blatant or illicit sex: "immodest to an offensive degree; lewd; appealing to prurience" (the root of that word is "itching, as for intercourse").

The Committee also agreed not to use the Italian counterpart for "cancer", which carries a strong connotation of malignancy, although some Italian experts now feel the word should be used with patients.

Similar(56)

(Until forever. While well known, this phrase has a very strong connotation of permanence. It might be used when a couple is separated by death).

Both seem like government "endorsements" of religion, even if the latter carries a stronger connotation thereof.Despite its limitations, the endorsement test goes a long way toward accounting for what's wrong with certain government-sponsored religious messages and programmes.

With the dissolution of the Great Chain, these form-genera were dissolved, and the new groupings that replaced them were augmented with monads (unicellular forms), a term that "thanks to Leibniz [ 116] and the Naturphilosophes, bore strong connotations of primitivity and potential" [ 37].

Property, an object of legal rights, which embraces possessions or wealth collectively, frequently with strong connotations of individual ownership.

I have sympathy with reporters and subeditors writing for the general reader – one of the uses of the phrase was not in the article but in the subheading – but I think it would have been better to avoid "right to die", which has such strong connotations of assisted dying.

Results of the discourse analysis indicate that the term, applied to fragments of urban space varying in function and scale, has strong connotations of conflict and strife.

The term carries strong connotations of autonomy and individuality.

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