6 adverbs to describe how to connotes

'Spirit' is a misleading word, for, historically, it connotes immateriality and a supernatural kind of existence, and the Theosophist believes neither in the one nor the other.

Psychologically, indeed, as well as practically, the vote connotes all sorts of different implications to the women of today, contemporaries though they are.

Psychologically, indeed, as well as practically, the vote connotes all sorts of different implications to the women of today, contemporaries though they are.

Throughout the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in England the term rhetoric and its related words regularly connoted skill in diction.

And now, having thus subtly connoted the character of our villain, let us proceed with our narrative.

At any rate to hear Emett and Jones express regret over the death of the doe justified in some degree my own feelings, and I thought it was not so much the death, but the lingering and terrible manner of it, and especially how vividly it connoted the wild-life drama of the plateau.

6 adverbs to describe how to  connotes  - Adverbs for  connotes