Instead, each of us is to use the denotative and connotative meanings of these terms with which we are most comfortable. |
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A focus on language, connotative and denotative meaning, is especially important in the cultural adaptation process. |
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The movement between associative or impressionistic writing and the denotative is one of the poem's many pleasures. |
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The film clips strike connotative or denotative meanings from our T. V. viewing childhood or youth. |
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The abstract part of a unit of meaning, its conceptual dimension and its contents, which can be denotative or connotative. |
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While Goodman may have identified a denotative role for buildings, this is not clearly a semantic role. |
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But her strange vernacular feels like words might if they could only burst from their denotative shells. |
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Traditionally, meaningfulness of stimuli has been defined in terms of their denotative and connotative properties. |
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Indeed, not much of anything denotative is easy to discern. |
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The denotative meanings of these abbreviations vary over a wide range. |
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In this regard Biafra and even Nigeria begin to operate in a less denotative sense and more as metonyms for the postcolonial world in general. |
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They have denotative English equivalent forms and can be replaced by their English equivalents either by translation or circumlocution. |
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These precious objects are not just a symbol of pride and prestige but also denotative of the rich Indian traditions and cultural heritage. |
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Denotative communication is information that is readily available for interpretation via the graphics and symbology presented on the map itself. |
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