Sentences with phrase «connotes more»

The designation connotes more than the usual telecommunication facilities: digital (ISDN) or fiber - optic phone lines, a T - 1 cable that speeds up Internet connections 100 times that of regular phone lines, and computer - specific RJ45 jacks to satisfy home - based tech heads» need for speed on the information superhighway.
knowledge» connotes more than subjective belief or unsupported speculation.»
However, one could argue that the latter connotes more strict simultaneity.
Calling these games «explorers» instead of «walkers» connotes a more loaded objective instead of simply appreciating the unadorned act of walking.
The LX 470 - the name change from the 450 connotes the more powerful 4.7 - liter V8 engine - and the new Land Cruiser still share the same basic architecture.
I think the word connotes a more participatory role for a wider variety of constituents who have a stake in helping schools.
People often talk about the dissemination of research, but John Easton, the director of the Institute of Education Sciences, prefers the word «facilitation,» which connotes more than just publishing a paper and throwing it to the wind.
Big Falcon Rocket, or BFR, is the flagship for the SpaceX vision of creating a permanent, self - sustaining human presence on Mars — and yes, the name connotes more than just «Falcon» to those inside SpaceX.
«Outsider art» supersedes «folk art,» connoting a more jarring, free - range aesthetic usually from outside the Northeast, as demonstrated here.

Not exact matches

In my scenario, instead of verification connoting what it currently does — this person is kind of famous, or a journalist, or knows somebody who works at Twitter — it would mean something more akin to «authenticated.»
According to the researchers, «The refusal frame «I don't» is more persuasive than the refusal frame «I can't» because the former connotes conviction to a higher degree... perceived conviction mediates the influence of refusal frame on persuasiveness.»
Since the English word «memory» usually connotes merely the passive storage of information, let us use the Latin word memoria to indicate this more active, interpretive, constructive faculty that Augustine celebrates.
The Prime Minister's Easter message highlighted how Easter brings hope, renewal and connotes spring and... More
Though the term arose when the nations were monarchies, and it had a more realistic symbolism then than now, it connotes power exercised, not in arbitrary dictatorial authority, but in loving concern.
So, to the modern mind, reason connotes self - creation in a more radical sense.
It is not at all probable that Mark thought of Christ as pre-existent; the title «Son of God» is only one more messianic title, and does not connote a metaphysical, hypostatic union with the Father — 13:32 and 10:18 rule out that idea.
Though correlation doesn't necessarily connote causation, it is interesting to note that 9 of the 10 most religious states in the US, as revealed by a 2008 Gallup poll of more than 355,000 adults in the U.S. regarding the importance of religion in their lives, are also on the CDC's list of the 10 fattest states.
The «point beyond history» is also a «mythical» concept (to be taken not literally but nonetheless seriously) which connotes the Christian's faith that the power and goodness of God can be made even more manifest in the hearts and minds of men.
In ordinary English, the word «school» seems more readily to connote the concrete institutional dimensions of the enterprise than does «education.»
It connotes a wish for good luck but clearly implies that more effort than luck is necessary.
If you want your profile to catch more attention, you might want to use words that connote positivity like happy and fun.
Anderson — who's become even more of an actors» director in his last few films than he was already — is at the peak of his powers here, ironically but appropriately directing «Vice» in such a way that phrases like «peak of his powers» (and other language connoting masculine swagger or preening mastery) seem contrary to the spirit of the thing.
Caesar's name (given to him by his human masters in the previous film) connotes power, nobility and vulnerability to betrayal; screenwriters Mark Bomback, Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver may want us to remember that Koba was Stalin's nickname, although Koba is more like Jeremy Irons's ferocious Scar in The Lion King.
Less subtext and more just text, using this colour within the narrative of We Need to Talk About Kevin connotes the foreshadowing and aftermath of death.
All that's missing is a storied name that connotes social status, but the Genesis policy of never again having to visit the dealer after the purchase — a rep comes to collect your car and delivers a loaner — more than compensates with the perks that fiscal wealth normally brings.
These days, the «utility» in «sport utility» increasingly connotes a vehicle's fitness for duty as a family connectivity hub more than it signals actual off - road or hauling abilities.
Yet what we see of them in the media, more often than not, are tableaux vivantes connoting poverty, dependence, and desperation.
«Rare» in «rare breeds» connotes nothing more than scarcity; it does not make a dog more valuable.
While the term «regatta» usually connotes sailing competitions in other parts of the world, in the Bahamas it primarily refers to the concerts and food... Read More
Hotel Beaux Arts has announced it will join Autograph Collection Hotels, the diverse portfolio of more than one hundred independent hotels around the world that connote vision, design and craft.
The name Pulse for the surface planet confused me because it sounded like a verb, similar to a character's Focus, which sounded more like a magic spell than something connoting the Prime Directive of the chosen (I'm still confused why the l'Cie aren't directly told what their Focus is).
This manifests innocently in the Land / World naming conventions (though, sadly «Land» games also used to connote Nintendo R&D 1 weirdness, but now they're largely more of the same old EAD stuff).
I suppose this was because «innovation» connotes something that can be measured, «creativity» connotes something far more personal.
THE FRENCH WORD décor means «scenery» or «stage set,» and more than its English equivalent, it connotes artifice, make - believe.
He derives a basic fact towards a more connoted concept.
On show here are works belonging to the Christian Democratic Appeal (a small clay figurine representing the importance of family values and faith), the Labor Party (a piece of a new kind of asphalt, more endurable under extreme temperatures, connoting stability, employment and freedom of movement for the working class), the Socialist Party (photos of a protest by harbor workers in Rotterdam that went on strike in 1979 to demand higher salaries), and Leefbar («Livable») Rotterdam (an image of tolerant multiculturalism, at odds with the ideological identity of the owners.)
His objections are more philosophical: «When Times New Roman appears in a book, document, or advertisement, it connotes apathy.
That connotes a lawyer who is an independent business person, a solo lawyer who's an independent business person who works on, again, a temporary or project basis, doing generally more substantive work and that's generally for solos and small law firms.
We don't use the more common «agent» unless it fits in the context of the sentence; it connotes a legal relationship many licensees don't have with their customers.
Connote cozy with more than just earthy hues.
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