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Discover LudwigThe phrase "all its connotations" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the various meanings or associations that a word, phrase, or concept may have beyond its literal definition.
Example: "The word 'home' carries all its connotations of warmth, safety, and belonging."
Alternatives: "all its implications" or "all its associations".
Exact(13)
It is a fine thing, no question about it, with all its connotations of care and comfort, its appreciation of the small foibles of humanity that science generally ignores.
By the time Mr. Rosei is finished, all its connotations have been intriguingly vitiated.
And "out there", with all its connotations, was where Nan Goldin was for a long time.
The group's leader, George Clinton, posits funk - in all its connotations, from dance rhythms to a rudely funny world view - as salvation from an increasingly sterile, self-destructive society.
Many readers want the newspaper, even on the news pages, to share their moral outrage — or their political views — by adopting the word terrorist, with all its connotations of opprobrium.
The events in the Ukrainian town of Pripyat on the morning of 26 April 1986 have permanently etched the name Chernobyl, and all its connotations, into the public mind.
Similar(47)
With regard to health, unity -- in all of its connotations -- is proving to be a concept of universal relevance and profound importance.
Those who "get it", I think are, like me, still very much attuned to the child they once were – not because of the cuddly toy angle but the idea that someone has bothered to make a bloody great bear, just because they felt like it, then camouflage it in Persian-style patterned carpet (with all its sociopolitical connotations) and exhibit it in an art gallery.
Color's name, while initially striking some people as slightly off if only for all its other connotations, is valid in that it accurately describes a core function of the Color Labs product, namely the fact that people are sharing images (a collection of colored pixels) through the app.
The terms "refugee" and "asylum seeker" may denote different things (crudely put, an asylum seeker only becomes a refugee when some or other official agency decides as such), but it's telling that the R word, with all its moral connotations, has all but disappeared from our national vocabulary.
Last year feminists proposed the "reclaiming" of the word "slut" and all its negative connotations.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com