Cannotative and Denotative Final
Cannotative and Denotative Final
Cannotative and Denotative Final
Connotation Definition
Connotation refers to a meaning that is implied by a word apart from the thing
which it describes explicitly. Words carry cultural and emotional associations or
meanings, in addition to their literal meanings or denotations.
For instance, “Wall Street” literally means a street situated in Lower Manhattan, but
connotatively it refers to wealth and power.
Words may have positive or negative connotations that depend upon the social,
cultural, and personal experiences of individuals. For example, the words childish,
childlike and youthful have the same denotative, but different connotative, meanings.
Childish and childlike have a negative connotation, as they refer to immature behavior
of a person. Whereas, youthful implies that a person is lively and energetic.
Below are a few connotation examples. Their suggested meanings are shaped by
cultural and emotional associations:
“He’s such a dog.” – In this sense, the word dog connotes shamelessness, or ugliness.
“That woman is a dove at heart.” – Here, the dove implies peace or gentility.
“There’s no place like home.” – While home may refer to the actual building someone
lives in, connotatively, it most often refers to family, comfort, and security.
In literature, it is a common practice among writers to deviate from the literal meanings
of words in order to create novel ideas. Figures of speech frequently employed by writers
are examples of such deviations.
Metaphors are words that connote meanings that go beyond their literal meanings.
Shakespeare, in his Sonnet 18, says:
Here, the phrase “a Summer’s Day” implies the fairness of his beloved.
Similarly, John Donne says in his poem The Sun Rising says:
This line suggests the speaker’s belief that he and his beloved are wealthier than all the
states, kingdoms, and rulers in the whole world because of their love.
Irony and satire exhibit connotative meanings, as the intended meanings of words are
opposite to their literal meanings. For example, we see a sarcastic remark made by
Antonio to Shylock, the Jew, in William Shakespeare’s play The Merchant of Venice:
The word “Jew” generally had a negative connotation of wickedness, while “Christian”
demonstrated positive connotations of kindness.
Here, the word “ear” connotes the idea of people listening to him attentively.
Read the following lines from Robert Frost’s poem Out, Out:
In the line “The life from spilling,” the word “life” connotes “blood.” It does make sense
as well because loss of blood may cause loss of life.
Connotation provides the basis for symbolic meanings of words because symbolic
meanings of objects are different from their literal sense. Look at the following lines
from Shakespeare’s play As you Like It:
Here, a stage connotes the world; players suggests human beings; and parts implies
different stages of their lives.
Function of Connotation
In literature, connotation paves way for creativity by using figures of speech like
metaphor, simile, symbolism, and personification. Had writers contented themselves
with only the literal meanings, there would have been no way to compare abstract ideas
to concrete concepts, in order to give readers a better understanding. Therefore,
connotative meanings of words allow writers to add to their works dimensions that are
broader, more vivid, and fresher.
Denotation
Introduction
Examples of denotation
Example 1: Wind.
Example 2: Poodle.
Example 4: Modern.
“Modern” means “belonging to recent times” denotatively, but may have other
connotations if used in a different manner.
Example 4: Dove.
A dove is technically and literally a wild or domesticated pigeon which has a thick,
round body and short legs. However, the symbolic dove represents the idea or concept
of peace in much literature, writing, and graphic representation.
Denotation in literature
In philosophy, denotation is the concept or object which a term refers to. It can
also be an entire set of objects of which a certain predicate is true. Denotation and
connotation are two sides of the same literary coin; where one is present the other is
not. Writers often assign new meanings or strip away meanings from common words in
order to find fresh, creative points of view on mundane subjects. Such figurative
language making reading and writing more interesting and connects it to different ideas
and concepts that may not have been apparent before. Some examples of literary devices
which change the denotation of a word are understatement, paradox, puns, metaphors,
similes, personifications, and hyperbole.
Robert Frost uses denotation in his poem Mending Wall: “And on a day we meet to walk
the line, and set the wall between us once again.”
Here the word “wall” has a denotative meaning and a connotative meaning. In
Wordsworth’s poem A Slumber did my Spirit Seal the following lines contain
denotation: “No motion has she now, no force; she neither hears nor sees; roll’d round
in earth’s diurnal course with rocks, and stones, and trees.” The portions of earth
referred to here are literal, making them denotative, even though the overall
implications of the stanza are connotative.