Accidental vs Denotative - What's the difference?
accidental | denotative |
Not essential; incidental, secondary.
(music) Adjusted by one or two semitones, in temporary departure from the key signature.
Occurring sometimes, by chance; occasional.
Happening by chance, or unexpectedly; taking place not according to the usual course of things; by accident, unintentional.
*1603 , (John Florio), translating Michel de Montaigne, Essays , III.1:
*:The way to trueth is but one and simple, that of particular profit and benefit of affaires a man hath in charge, double, uneven and accidentall .
(geometry) Being a double point with two distinct tangent planes in 4-dimensional projective space.
A property which is not essential; a nonessential; anything happening accidentally.
* Fuller — He conceived it just that accidentals ... should sink with the substance of the accusation.
(painting, pluralonly) Those fortuitous effects produced by luminous rays falling on certain objects so that some parts stand forth in abnormal brightness and other parts are cast into a deep shadow.
(music) A sharp, flat, or natural, occurring not at the commencement of a piece of music as the signature, but before a particular note.
That denotes or names; designative
* (Oliver Sacks), Seeing Voices: A Journey into the World of the Deaf
Specific to the primary meaning of a term
As adjectives the difference between accidental and denotative
is that accidental is not essential; incidental, secondary while denotative is that denotes or names; designative.As a noun accidental
is a property which is not essential; a nonessential; anything happening accidentally.accidental
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Synonyms
* adventitious, casual, contingent, fortuitous, incidental, occasional, serendipitousDerived terms
* accidental chords * accidental colors * accidental point * accidental lightsNoun
(en noun)denotative
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- There was still no concept of language (arithmetical symbolism, perhaps, is not a language, is not denotative in the same sense as words).