Connotation and Denotation Worksheet
Connotation and Denotation Worksheet
Look at two words with a denotation of “costing a small amount of money.” inexpensive VS cheap
Which word has a negative connotation? Would you want to buy a “cheap” computer? If you are
proud of a jewelry purchase you made, would say it was “cheap” jewelry? Have you ever almost said
the word “cheap” but quickly changed it to “inexpensive”?
Technically, “inexpensive” and “cheap” are very close in their literal meanings, but “cheap” implies
that the object is lacking in quality, not just price. “Cheap” has come to have this connotation
because of the way the word is used by English speakers.
Examples:
Notice the speakers are carefully choosing their words to convey negative or positive emotions.
Mr. Negative: My chemistry class was difficult. Mr. Positive: That child is little.
Mr. Negative: That child is puny. Mr. Negative: My call to the company was ignored.
Group 1
Thin, slim, lanky, skinny, gaunt, slender Slender slim thin Skinny lanky gaunt
Group 2
Group 3
1. What is the general meaning of each of the three sentences about Annette? Do the words
surprised, amazed, and astonished have approximately the same denotation?
2. What additional meanings are suggested by astonish? Would one be more likely to be surprised
or astonished at seeing a ghost?
3. Circle the word in each pair below that has the more favorable connotation to you:
Thrifty, penny-pinching
Pushy, aggressive
Politician, statesman
Chef, cook
Slender, skinny
Read each list of words below. Each word has a different connotation, but has the same general
denotation. Decide what the general denotation is for each group. Write your answer on the line.
Then, number the words in each group from most positive connotation to most negative
connotation.
Example:
The growing commerce in plantation products from the Americas made a third pattern—the trade
in slaves—increasingly lucrative. The grueling work under tropical or semitropical conditions and
the constant expansion of plantation areas required a continual flow of fresh labor. As plantation
agriculture flourished, the trade in black African slaves grew increasingly efficient. During the
eighteenth century, some sixty thousand slaves annually were imported into the Western
Hemisphere from Africa.
1. What does the term grueling connote about the work of slaves?
"The only recklessness the Suffragettes have ever shown has been about their own lives and not
about the lives of others. It had never been, and it never will be, the policy of the women’s Social and
Political Union recklessly to endanger human life. We leave that to the men in warfare. . . .
There is something that Governments care far more for than human life, and that is the security of
property and so it is through property that we shall strike the enemy. —Emmeline Pankhurst
2. What word could replace strike to describe the action in a less forceful way?
A. blast
B. sway
C. destroy
D. annihilate
3. In the passage above, the word strike suggests what kind of action?
A. polite
B. aggressive
C. soothing
D. uncertain
4. Which of the following words meaning "to take food into the body" has the most aggressive
connotation?
A. dine
B. consume
C. ingest
D. devour
5. Which of the following words meaning "lacking color" has the most positive connotation?
A. ashen
B. pale
C. pasty
D. fair
6. Which pair of words has similar denotative meaning but different connotative meanings?
7. Which of the following words meaning "given to promoting one's will or authority over others" has
the most positive connotation?
A. pushy
B. overbearing
C. assertive
D. bossy
8. The words know-it-all, wise, smart, and quick-witted all have similar meanings. Which word would
a writer use to express a negative opinion about a person?
A. know-it-all
B. smart
C. wise
D. quick-witted
A. convey
B. carry
C. transport
D. haul
10. Which of the following words meaning "to give instructions to" has the gentlest connotation?
A. dictate
B. direct
C. command
D. order