Evocative in a sentence as an adjective

And that is that images, while evocative, are not very precise.

But creating a work with evocative punch like this poem has is more akin to composing a symphony.

The ideas are often evocative, but I feel he has no grasp of the practical difficulties of his claims.

Then there is group B, which has quickly tired of the constant stream of ultra-evocative titles from Upworthy and BuzzFeed.

When it was written, people were likely more in touch with the weather than a lot of people in developed countries today, so it would have been more strongly evocative for that audience.

Specifically, they use term 'experiential name' for names that hint or evoke an idea what the product does, but reserve term 'evocative' for positioning.

Even cowboy boots, even some sort of evocative mood, whatever, that's fine, but if you are using leather because you think you're making it distinct, there are far too many others doing the same.

But in between these two classes there is a huge dump of worn-out metaphors which have lost all evocative power and are merely used because they save people the trouble of inventing phrases for themselves.

" Again, as a non-programmer, this is probably just some useless observation, but its inspirational and evocative to me nonetheless.

But the naming is not immediately evocative of the relationship, particularly since in computing, "job" is pretty overloaded.

Only tangentially related if that, but I re-read Neuromancer recently and realized with some sadness that its very evocative opening line [1] will quite quickly cease to have meaning for generations who grew up without analog TVs. We tend to think of literature as timeless, but there's a very real, if small, slice of it washed out by the tide of shifting metaphors.

A journalistic and literary trope I increasingly despise: creating an elaborate and evocative metaphorical description of something without naming what it actually is, often with the side-effect of making a rather mundane technicality sound all gee-wiz and confusing rather than enlightening the reader.

Evocative definitions

adjective

serving to bring to mind; "cannot forbear to close on this redolent literary note"- Wilder Hobson; "a campaign redolent of machine politics"

See also: redolent remindful reminiscent resonant