单词 | inwardness |
释义 | inwardnessn.ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > internal organs > [noun] innethc888 guta1000 inwardc1000 inwarda1300 entrailc1330 innerera1340 entraila1382 inwardness1388 bowelc1440 paunch?c1475 umbles1536 parts entire1596 inmeat1616 in-parta1629 internalsa1629 giblet1647 viscera1651 pluck1711 viscus1728 inside1741 trollibags1824 innards1825 interior1835 splanchnology1842 work1884 the world > space > relative position > condition of being internal > [noun] > that which is within > interior part(s) inwardness1388 entrail?c1400 entrail1434 bowel1548 pluck1611 viscera1709 embowelment1821 internals1899 innards1903 1388 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) 2 Cor. vi. 12 Ȝe ben not angwischid in vs, but ȝe ben anguischid in ȝoure inwardnessis [1382 entrailis]. 1388 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) Phil. ii. 1 If ony inwardnesse of merci. a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Luke i. 78 Bi the inwardnesse of the merci of oure God. 1530 Myroure Oure Ladye (Fawkes) (1873) ii. 158 Not faynedly only with tongue, but of all the inwardenesse of sowle. 2. The inward or intrinsic character or quality of a thing; the inner nature, essence, or meaning. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > essence or intrinsic nature > [noun] pitheOE i-cundeeOE roota1325 substancec1330 juicec1380 marrowa1382 formc1385 acta1398 quidditya1398 substantial forma1398 inward1398 savourc1400 inwardc1450 allaya1456 essencya1475 being1521 bottom1531 spirit?1534 summary1548 ecceity1549 core1556 flower1568 formality1570 sum and substance1572 alloy1594 soul1598 inwardness1605 quid1606 fibre1607 selfness1611 whatness1611 essentialityc1616 propera1626 the whole shot1628 substantiala1631 esse1642 entity1643 virtuality1646 ingeny1647 quoddity1647 intimacy1648 ens1649 inbeing1661 essence1667 interiority1701 intrinsic1716 stamen1758 character1761 quidditas1782 hyparxis1792 rasa1800 bone1829 what1861 isness1865 inscape1868 as-suchness1909 Wesen1959 1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Ee3v I should without any difficultie pronounce, that his Fables had no such inwardnesse in his owne meaning. View more context for this quotation 1647 H. More Philos. Poems i. i. xxviii Sense cannot arrive to th' inwardnesse Of things. 1830 H. N. Coleridge Introd. Greek Poets 163 Perhaps Lord Bacon is right in thinking that Homer had no such inwardness in his own meaning. 1869 J. R. Lowell Fam. Epist. to Friend vii Nor Nature fails my walks to bless With all her golden inwardness. 1877 N.Y. Tribune Apr. (Cent. Dict.) The true inwardness of the late Southern policy of the Republican party. 1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 18 July 1/1 We have always contended that the true ‘inwardness’ of the Land Bill was not the wish to stop evictions, but the wish to stop the scandal of evictions. 1887 Pall Mall Gaz. 21 Nov. 5/1 How can we trust any book to show us the true inwardness of a man we never set eyes on? 1895 Massingham in Contemp. Rev. Aug. 301 In another sense we have taken too little account of the inwardness of the lives of the poor. 3. The quality or condition of being inward or internal to something else (literal or figurative). ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > condition of being internal > [noun] inliheadc1450 inwardness1611 internalitya1641 interiority1701 internity1770 interiorness1895 inness1896 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > privacy > [noun] > inward or hidden thoughts, etc. > quality of inwardness1611 1611 J. Florio Queen Anna's New World of Words Interiorita, inwardnesse. a1680 S. Charnock Several Disc. Existence of God (1682) 244 The Apostle doth not say, By him, but in him, to show the inwardness of his Presence. 1858 W. E. Gladstone Stud. Homer II. 130 That inwardness and universality of function which belongs to Minerva. 1858 D. M. Mulock Woman's Thoughts about Women 266 It must always be, from its very secretness and inwardness, the sharpest of all pangs. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > friendliness > [noun] > intimacy privitya1250 nearnessc1485 familiarness1539 inwardness1578 greatnessa1586 privatenessa1586 entireness1599 habitude1612 gossiprya1614 strictnessc1614 mutualitiesa1616 particulara1616 intimity1617 privancy1622 privacy1638 intimacy1641 intimateness1642 familiarity1664 throng1768 closeness1851 close harmony1876 innerliness1888 insociation1893 dearness- 1578 in P. F. Tytler Hist. Scotl. (1864) IV. 19 I fear that no great inwardness shall be found in them, when they find her majesty's liberality coming slowly to them. 1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing iv. i. 247 You know my inwardnesse and loue Is very much vnto the prince and Claudio. View more context for this quotation 1652 P. Heylyn Cosmographie i. sig. E6 Menas..by reason of his inwardness with his Master, knew most of his designs. 1668 S. Pepys Diary 23 Aug. (1976) IX. 286 The Duke of York..did with much inwardness tell me what was doing. 1715 R. Steele Town-talk No. 1 It probably dropt hastily in the..inwardness of conjugal confidence, from the pen of a fond husband writing to a young, gay, and beautiful wife. 5. a. Depth or intensity of feeling or thought; subjectivity. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > intense emotion > [noun] > intensity or depth strengthOE deepnessc1175 inliheadc1450 profundity1565 depth1597 keenness1600 profoundness1612 poignancy1745 poignance1812 intensity1830 inwardness1836 the mind > mental capacity > thought > continued thinking, reflection, contemplation > [noun] > depth or intensity of deepnessa1000 inwardness1836 1836 J. C. Hare & A. W. Hare Guesses at Truth (1859) 72 That depth and inwardness of thought, which seems to belong to the Germanic mind. 1845 Peter Parley's Ann. 106 The..blackcap..pours..his..love-song—scarcely inferior, in a certain plaintive inwardness, to the autumn song of the robin. 1871 R. H. Hutton Ess. (1877) I. Pref. 27 The new inwardness with which men are conceiving their relation to each other. b. Relation to or occupation with what is inward or concerns man's inner nature, as opposed to occupation with externalities; spirituality. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > spirituality > [noun] spiritual1649 thoughtsomeness1674 spiritedness1681 soulhood1849 soulship1855 inwardness1859 innerness1881 1859 B. Jowett Ess. Interpr. Script. in Epist. St. Paul (1894) 28 This inwardness of the words of Christ is what few are able to receive. 1873 M. Arnold Lit. & Dogma iii. 96 Trying to identify the Messiah of popular hope..with an ideal of meekness, inwardness, patience, and self-denial. 1876 C. D. Warner Winter on Nile x. 132 They sleep the sleep of ‘inwardness’ and peace. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.1388 |
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