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Jackson6612 Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Some words used in wrong contexts can have bad/negative connotation

Please correct the given text:

Some words used in wrong contexts can have bad/negative connotation. e.g. brother-in-law has no bad/negative connotation of its own but its usage by the person who is not actually your brother-in-law can have extremely negative/bad connotation.
  

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Hi, Please correct the given text: Some words used in wrong contexts can have bad/negative connotation. g. brother-in-law has no bad/negative connotation of its own but its usage by the person who is not actually your brother-in-law can have extremely negative/bad connotation.

  • Hi, Please correct the given text: Some words used in wrong contexts can have bad/negative connotation.
  • g.
  • brother-in-law has no bad/negative connotation of its own but its usage by the person who is not actually your brother-in-law can have extremely negative/bad connotation.
  • Some words used in the wrong contexts can have negative connotations.
  • For example, brother-in-law has no negative connotation of its own, but its use by a person who is not actually your brother-in-law can have a extremely negative connotation.
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1 Answers
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Hi,
Please correct the given text:

Some words used in wrong contexts can have bad/negative connotation. e.g. brother-in-law has no bad/negative connotation of its own but its usage by the person who is not actually your brother-in-law can have extremely negative/bad connotation.

Some words used in the wrong contexts can have negative connotations. For example, brot

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