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connotations and adult
The causes of this premature sexualization that have been cited include portrayals in the media of sex and related issues, especially in media aimed at children ; the marketing of products with sexual connotations to children, including clothing ; the lack of parental oversight and discipline ; access to adult culture via the internet ; and the lack of comprehensive school sex education programs.
For similar reasons, Kiki's Delivery Service was retitled in Spanish " Niki, la aprendiz de bruja " (" Niki, the witch apprentice "), as the original name of the character has ( unintentional ) adult connotations: kiki is vulgar for coitus in Spain.

connotations and love
The term " sex radical " is also used interchangeably with the term " free lover ", and was the preferred term by advocates because of the negative connotations of " free love ".
The term " sex radical " is also used interchangeably with the term " free lover ", and was the preferred term by advocates because of the negative connotations of " free love ".
Kāma ( Sanskrit, Pali ; Devanagari: क ा म ) is often translated from Sanskrit as sexual desire, sexual pleasure, sensual gratification, sexual fulfillment, or eros, but can more broadly mean desire, wish, passion, longing, pleasure of the senses, the aesthetic enjoyment of life, affection, or love, without sexual connotations.
According to Vicente, the " clichéd references to " honey ", " longing " and " yearning ", and even the sexual connotations of being " wet " on the inside " relate not to " secular " love, yet to " ecstatic " Sufi poetry.

connotations and both
Given these connotations, dandyism can be seen as a political protestation against the rise of levelling egalitarian principles, often including nostalgic adherence to feudal or pre-industrial values, such as the ideals of " the perfect gentleman " or " the autonomous aristocrat ", though paradoxically, the dandy required an audience, as Susann Schmid observed in examining the " successfully marketed lives " of Oscar Wilde and Lord Byron, who exemplify the dandy's roles in the public sphere, both as writers and as personae providing sources of gossip and scandal.
In commentary on the term and its usage, scholars have noted it is both a popular colloquial term, and one that has negative connotations.
Though the notion appears frequently throughout Nietzsche's work, he uses the term in a variety of ways, with different meanings and connotations, both positive and negative.
" Unification " has political as well as religious connotations, in keeping with the church's teaching that restoration must be complete, both spiritual and physical.
The term " society " is currently used to cover both a number of political and scientific connotations as well as a variety of associations.
This was a non-representative and de facto dynastic mode of succession, with royal connotations in both styles awarded, even a double invocation 16 December 1653-3 September 1658 " By the Grace of God and Republic Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ireland " and many other monarchic prerogatives, such as awarding knighthoods.
This is in part due to the 1949-generation Mainlanders have gradually passed on the scene, and politicians supporting and opposing the Taiwanese independence movement both realize a majority of Taiwan's current residents, either because they are born in Taiwan to Mainlander parents with no collective memories of the ancestral homes, or they are native Taiwanese thus feeling no historical connotations with the entire pre-1949 Republic of China on mainland China, support the movement as such.
Main supporters of the bill were the LDP and the Komeito ( CGP ), while the opposition included the Social Democratic Party ( SDPJ ) and Communist Party ( CPJ ), who cited the connotations both symbols had with the war era.
It has connotations of decadence, which are seen as typical for the last years of a culturally vibrant period ( La Belle Époque at the turn of the 19th to 20th century and until World War I ), and of anticipative excitement about, or despair facing, impending change, or both, that is generally expected when a century or time period draws to a close.
" The terms birding and birdwatching are today used by some interchangeably, although many participants prefer birding, both because it does not exclude the auditory aspects of enjoying birds, and because it does not have some associated negative connotations.
While the English term often implies that the substitution is of unsatisfactory or inferior quality (" not as good as the real thing "), it has both connotations in German, depending on the other noun ; e. g. ' Ersatzteile ' ( spare parts ) is just a technical expression without any valuation, whereas in more cases it means things of ( a little ) poorer quality-e. g.
While the term has negative connotations to some, it is proudly used by some members of this community to identify their history and cultural affiliation to a common ancestry while being separated from the island, both physically and through language and cultural shifts.
So, to downgrade its importance in the eyes of both friend and foe, he ordered the name, with its historic connotations, changed, reasoning that if the Allies managed to break through they would not be able to use the more impressive name to magnify their victory claims.
The derogatory power of the term derives both from its denotative meaning of a promiscuous woman, but also from its historical and regional connotations or alternate meanings that identify a slut as a dirty or unkempt person.
As, in these languages, use of script often has cultural or political connotations, proclamation of an official script is sometimes criticised as having a goal of influencing culture or politics or both.
Given the content of the book, the title is likely to imply both connotations ( the same way as the word " Antichristianity " would in English ).
Although both forms could be considered to have unfavourable connotations, only the Welsh name has been controversial, as some residents have expressed the view that Sili belittles the village.
Revisionist history carries both positive and negative connotations.
The word has different connotations from the similar word gourmet, which emphasises an individual with a highly refined discerning palate, but in practice the two terms are closely linked, as both imply the enjoyment of good food.
In this way Collishaw brings together a variety of connotations in one piece that is both traditional and contemporary ; dichotomies of life and death and attraction and repulsion are central to Collishaw ’ s art which tests our natural responses to disquieting imagery when dressed as sacred, slick or stunning.
The word homosexual itself had different connotations for those who used it 100 years ago to what it does today ; Anna Rüling, one of the first women to publicly defend gay rights, considered gay people a third gender, different from both men and women.
The term can be broken down as " human monster "; and while some would argue that yao here means " enchanting ", the word has both connotations.
The phrase also can have negative connotations, as some may perceive the lack of reaction to adversity as complacence, both to social and political forces.
In both New Zealand and Australia, the term can have other related connotations.

connotations and Spanish
Salsa means ' sauce ' in the Spanish language, and carries connotations of the spiciness common in Latin and Caribbean cuisine.
Marrano acquired connotations of " filthy-dirty " ( sucio ) and " unscrupulous " ( sin escrúpulos ) during the time of the Spanish Inquisition, when the term was used to impugn the character of the recalcitrant crypto-Jew.
They chose the name " Yo La Tengo " ( Spanish for " I have it "; referring to a female-gender object or person, also " I've Got Her ") in an effort to avoid any connotations in English.
When not specifically referring to the above-mentioned mixed Caucasoid-Amerindian communities, the term ' cholo ' generally may convey the same connotations of Amerindian ancestry in various proportions than Spanish.
* Mitsubishi Pajero had to be renamed to Montero in Spain and Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, since pajero is a Spanish slang term for one who masturbates ( with similar connotations as the British slang term wanker ).
With the fall of the Spanish Empire, the numerous caste terminologies fell out of use and lost all meaning, other than the categories of White, Black, Amerindian, and their three possible resulting combinations ; mestizo, mulato and zambo ( the latter three, now without blood quantum connotations ), as these legal categories were seen as incompatible with the new concept of citizenship.
The stylish connotations of the name " Trocadero " derive from the Battle of Trocadero in southern Spain, a citadel held by liberal Spanish forces that was taken by the French troops sent by Charles X, in 1823.
Comunero is a Spanish term with several meanings ; literally, it means " member of a community ", but it has other connotations as well, depending on context.

connotations and Portuguese
For many older East Timorese, the Indonesian language has negative connotations with the Suharto regime, but many younger people have expressed suspicion or hostility to the reinstatement of Portuguese, which they see as a ' colonial language ' in much the same way that Indonesians saw Dutch.

connotations and languages
It does not claim to capture all connotations of the concept ' probable ' in colloquial speech of natural languages.
When used as a proper noun, the word, as well as its equivalents in other languages often have ethnic nationalist connotations.
Some of IKEA's Swedish product names have amusing or unfortunate connotations in other languages, sometimes resulting in the names being withdrawn in certain countries.
Cantonese frequently associate numbers with the following connotations ( based on its sound ), which may differ in other Chinese languages:
People tend to give slightly more negative connotations to words that are typed with the left hand on the QWERTY keyboard, including its variants in several languages.
The animal's name carries porcine connotations in many European languages.
Assignment of positive and negative connotations of white and black date to the classical period in a number of Indo-European languages, but these differences were not applied to skin color per se.
The neologism topolect has been coined as a more literal translation of fangyan in order to avoid the connotations of the term " dialect " ( which in its normal English usage suggests mutually intelligible varieties of a single language ), and to make a clearer distinction between " major varieties " ( separate languages, in Western terminology ) and " minor varieties " ( dialects of a single language ).
Cynology, may have other connotations or use in languages other than English, see German: de: Kynologie, Dutch: nl: Kynologie and Czech: cs: Sportovní_kynologie.
Baba means " old woman " or " grandmother " in most Slavic languages ; it derives from babytalk and often has come to have pejorative connotations in modern Slavic languages.
The most obviously derivative words are burgher in English, Bürger in German or burger in Dutch ( literally citizen, with connotations of middle-class in English and other Germanic languages ).
The term was widely used to describe languages such as LISP, though usually with negative connotations about performance.
Minjung is a Korean word that is difficult to properly translate into other languages in a way that retains its historical and cultural connotations.
# The Japanese language has thus a unique grammatical structure and native lexical corpus whose idiosyncratic syntax and connotations condition the Japanese to think in peculiar patterns unparalleled in other human languages.
" One reason may be that West Germanic languages do not have a good equivalent of the term ; the closest may be Hail ( English )/ Heil ( German ), which understandably has tainted connotations.
While already the Latin version of the title of this work is given in two versions ( De re publica and De Republica ), depending on source, the translation of the title of this work knows even more variants, often indicating the stance of the translator: since the expression " res publica " ( appearing in a deflection in the title of this work ) later evolved, with some shifts of meaning, to republic, or a similar term in many languages, there is no general consensus over the interpretation of the connotations implied by these expressions.
-" person who makes ") -- a term found in both the Tagalog and Bisaya languagesis also used, particularly in regions in the Visayas ( although this term has other connotations not found in the word albularyo ).
The word " Byzantinism " and related, like " Byzantine ", have acquired negative connotations in several West European languages, including the English language.

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