The second important way in which meanings show instability, is the presence of supplementery values which we call 'connotations'. The meaning of a form for any one speaker is nothing more than a result of the situations in which he has heard this form. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.151 The most important connotations arise from the social standing of the speakers who use a form. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.152 The connotation of technical forms gets its flavor from the standing of the trade or craft from which they are taken. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.152 The connotation of learned forms is vaguer but more frequent: almost any colloquial form has a parallel form with learned connotation. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.153 Foreign speech-forms bear connotations of their own, which reflect our attitude toward foreign peoples. The foreign features of form may consist in peculiarities of sound or of phonetic pattern [...] - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.153 Opposed to the foreign-learned connotation, the slangy connotation is facetious and unrestrained [...] - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.154
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