From skills-for-humanity
Audits word choices for emotional and political connotations beyond literal meaning. Helps find alternatives when language feels loaded or creates unintended reactions.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:s4h-linguistics-connotationThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Words do not just mean. They do.
Words do not just mean. They do.
The gap between denotation (what a word technically refers to) and connotation (what it evokes, who uses it, what it signals about you) is where most communication misfires originate. "Investment" and "expenditure" can describe the same financial transaction, yet one word positions the speaker as forward-looking and the other as cost-focused. "Activist" and "advocate" describe someone who takes public action on a cause; one has acquired associations with disruption and radicalism that the other has not. "Undocumented" and "illegal" describe the same immigration status; their connotative freight determines what policy conclusions feel available.
Steven Pinker's work on the "euphemism treadmill" demonstrates that this is not a solved problem: even carefully chosen neutral terms acquire negative connotations over time as long as the underlying referent carries stigma. The solution is not finding the "right" neutral word but understanding what your current word choices are doing and making deliberate choices about what to activate.
This skill audits word choices for their connotative freight — the emotional register, political associations, in-group signaling, and audience-specific valence of key terms — and finds better alternatives when the current choices are undermining the message.
Step 1: Identify Key Terms Read the text, message, or word list provided. Identify the terms with the highest connotative significance — the words doing the most work beyond their literal meaning. These are usually:
Framing check: Confirm the text and the connotation task before continuing. State what you've identified — the communication being analyzed and the primary connotation concern — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Step 2: Map Connotative Freight For each key term, analyze:
Step 3: Assess the Gap Compare the intended message against the connotative freight being carried. Where is the freight:
Before generating alternatives: Show the freight map and ask the user to weigh in on which mismatches matter most. Use AskUserQuestion:
Step 4: Generate Replacement Candidates For terms where the freight is undermining the message, generate replacement candidates. For each candidate:
Step 5: Assess Consistency Scan for connotative inconsistency across the text: a formal register disrupted by colloquial terms, a compassionate framing undercut by clinical language, a bold claim softened by hedging vocabulary. Consistency of connotative register is as important as individual word choices.
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences, then ask:
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Connotation Audit
| Term | Denotation | Connotation | Freight type | Audience sensitivity | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Assessment key: Amplifying / Undermining / Neutral / Audience-specific
Replacement Candidates For each term flagged as Undermining or Audience-specific:
Register Consistency Assessment Overall connotative register: [description]. Inconsistencies flagged: [list].
Connotation analysis is not about finding "safe" or "neutral" language. Neutral language often carries its own freight — clinical distance can signal coldness, bureaucratic language can signal evasion, corporate language can signal inauthenticity. The goal is alignment: making your connotative register serve your communicative purpose.
Pinker's euphemism treadmill warns against chasing neutrality: the problem is often not the word but the underlying referent. If the referent carries stigma or difficulty, the replacement will eventually inherit the same freight. This matters for long-term terminology strategy: sustainable term change requires changing the underlying perception, not just the word.
Pair with /s4h-linguistics-framing when the problem is larger than individual words — when the entire conceptual frame is wrong. Pair with /s4h-communication-clarity-audit when the issue is comprehension and ambiguity rather than connotation and valence.
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/s4h-linguistics-framing — Surface the frame these word choices are activating/s4h-linguistics-pragmatics — Analyze what the full text implies beyond what it says/s4h-communication-clarity-audit — Audit the text for clarity and comprehension failures alongside connotation issuesnpx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityRoutes to the right linguistics skill based on your situation. Use when you want language analysis — framing, connotation, pragmatics, or semantic drift — applied without knowing which specific tool fits.
Scans drafts for technical jargon, unexplained acronyms, and insider language, providing plain-language alternatives for each. Use when editing specialist content for a general audience.
Classifies hedges in drafts as precision (keep) or weakness (flag), suggests rewrites. Use when a draft feels wishy-washy.