Connote in a sentence as a verb

If you're using it in a negative statement, it tends to connote a woman who isn't very smart.

My skin color and gender both connote a number of invalid assumptions.

The NSA's ability to snarf it off the wire, stipulated, does not connote their ability to read it.

There's nothing wrong with "hacking" and being a "hacker", but it truly does connote the idea of fiddling with something until it works and then saying "tadaa!

But it is just pattern matching - 'sexism' seems to connote intent, or at least some kind of discrimination / negativity.

It can connote intent, but a lot of the social justice-y types use it in a way that specifically does not require any intent.

It does not connote any specific value to the connection relative to others, nor is it derogatory.

" Furthermore, "-friend" fails to connote the appropriate level of commitment - even absent the impact of Facebook.

We have a common understanding or definition of what racism is and it connotes something immoral.

If you can, in your hiring process, get a decent prediction of effectiveness and competence, and stipulating that passion does not connote effectiveness and competence, is it smart to screen for passion?

For example, I want to connote that acqui-hires rather than buying traditional economic value, symbolize an acquisition and alignment of social proof.

_Some_ sociologists define racism as something else which also connotes something immoral.

You have to look beyond the connotations because it's much too easy to hide a predisposition to reject anything a certain gender says behind a litany of jargon and adequate explanations, smartly avoiding trigger words that connote the sexist intention.

Connote definitions

verb

express or state indirectly

See also: imply

verb

involve as a necessary condition of consequence; as in logic; "solving the problem is predicated on understanding it well"

See also: predicate