ImprovingVocab Connotations
ImprovingVocab Connotations
ENGLISH ENHANCEMENT
COURSE
loud adjective
1. marked by extremely high volume:
earsplitting, deafening, roaring
2. tastelessly showy: chintzy, flashy,
gaudy, tacky, garish
3. offensive in manner: unpleasant,
aggressive, distasteful
All three expressions
refer to the same people,
but they trigger different
associations in a reader's
mind:
A vagrant is often seen
as a public nuisance,
while a homeless may
have fallen into hard
times.
Someone writing an
editorial in support of a
new shelter might use
the positive form.
Yet someone writing an
editorial in support of
anti-loitering laws
would use the negative
form.
The connotation of some words - or the attitudes
we associate with them - can be seen in these
pairs of words that are similar in meaning, but
different in the positive or negative attitudes
they evoke in most people.
• refreshing – chilly
• plain – natural
• clever – sly
• snob – cultured
• cop – officer
• skinny – slender
Positive Connotation:
The child held tightly to his mother.
Negative Connotation:
The kid hung onto his mother.
The words child and held tightly
sound more sensitive and
compassionate than kid and
hung onto.
Positive Connotation:
The doctor gave the child an injection.
Negative Connotation:
The doctor gave the child a shot.
Choose the word below that suggests
a more positive connotation.
Denotation is the
strict dictionary
meaning of a word.