denotation

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The act of denoting, or something (such as a symbol) that denotes
  2. The primary, surface, literal, or explicit meaning of a signifier such as a word, phrase, or symbol; that which a word denotes, as contrasted with its connotation; the aggregate or set of objects of which a word may be predicated.
  3. The intension and extension of a word
  4. Something signified or referred to; a particular meaning of a symbol
  5. Any mathematical object which describes the meanings of expressions from the languages, formalized in the theory of denotational semantics
  6. A first level of analysis: what the audience can visually see on a page. Denotation often refers to something literal, and avoids being a metaphor.

Pronunciation

/ˌdiː.noʊˈteɪ.ʃən/ en-us-denotation.ogg

Word forms

denotation denotations

Etymology

From Late Latin dēnotātiō, from Latin dēnotāre (“to denote, mark out”) + -tiō (suffix forming nouns of action), from dē- (“completely”) + notāre (“to mark”); equivalent to denote + -ation.

Related words

Derived words

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.