the material world, especially as surrounding humankind and existing independently of human activities.
the natural world as it exists without human beings or civilization: In nature, wild dogs hunt in packs.
the elements of the natural world, as mountains, trees, animals, or rivers: The abandoned power plant was reclaimed by nature, covered in overgrowth and home to feral animals.
natural scenery: Tourists at the resort are surrounded by nature.
the universe, with all its phenomena: Conservation of energy is a universal law of nature.
the sum total of the forces at work throughout the universe.
reality, as distinguished from any effect of art: a portrait true to nature.
the particular combination of qualities belonging to a person, animal, thing, or class by birth, origin, or constitution; native or inherent character: human nature.
the instincts or inherent tendencies directing conduct: a man of good nature.
character, kind, or sort: two books of the same nature.
characteristic disposition; temperament: a self-willed nature; an evil nature.
the original, natural, uncivilized condition of humankind.
the biological functions or the urges to satisfy their requirements.
a primitive, wild condition; an uncultivated state.
a simple, uncluttered mode of life without the conveniences or distractions of civilization: a return to nature.
(initial capital letter, italics) a prose work (1836), by Ralph Waldo Emerson, expounding transcendentalism.
Theology. the moral state as unaffected by grace.
Idioms for nature
by nature, as a result of inborn or inherent qualities; innately: She is by nature a kindhearted person.
in a state of nature,
in an uncivilized or uncultured condition.
without clothes; nude; naked.
of / in the nature of, having the character or qualities of: in the nature of an apology.
Origin of nature
1200–50; Middle English natur(e) <Old French <Latin nātūra conditions of birth, quality, character, natural order, world, equivalent to nāt(us) (past participle of nāscī to be born) + -ūra-ure
That’s the nature of business, and in this author’s opinion, it is precisely why the best solution is for Platforms to cease the obfuscation of data for the sake of more automated campaign types that may or may not work as well for all advertisers.
This decade’s most important marketing question: What data rights do advertisers possess?|Kirk Williams|September 17, 2020|Search Engine Land
“People are trying to figure out how we can work with nature to improve the health of these wetlands,” Narayan says.
Soggy coastal soils? Here’s why ecologists love them|Alison Pearce Stevens|September 17, 2020|Science News For Students
I like his account so much that I wish its central idea didn’t conflict with pretty much everything that I’ve written about the nature of belief over the past 25 years.
Believing in Monsters: David Livingstone Smith on the Subhuman - Facts So Romantic|Eric Schwitzgebel|September 11, 2020|Nautilus
My proposal is that the inherently directed nature of Reality entails that it’s objectively good for Reality when it manifests as pleasure and objectively bad for Reality when it manifests as pain.
The Universe Knows Right from Wrong - Issue 89: The Dark Side|Philip Goff|September 9, 2020|Nautilus
Truth be told, given the precarious nature of Antetokounmpo’s future — he can become an unrestricted free agent after next season — just about everything should be on the table.
The Bucks Played It Safe And Made The Wrong Kind Of History|Chris Herring (chris.herring@fivethirtyeight.com)|September 9, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
The “nature of the crime” was too serious to release him, they said.
His First Day Out Of Jail After 40 Years: Adjusting To Life Outside|Justin Rohrlich|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
That explanation is believable…but increasingly less so when you hear Jay talk about the nature of his relationship with Adnan.
The Deal With Serial’s Jay? He’s Pissed Off, Mucks Up Our Timeline|Emily Shire|December 31, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Along the river, crumbling remnants of an active trading hub are overtaken by nature.
The Congo's Forgotten Colonial Getaway|Nina Strochlic|December 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“Heavy water”, or D2O, is even less common in nature, though nuclear engineers make and use it in some reactors.
Are Comets the Origin of Earth’s Oceans?|Matthew R. Francis|December 14, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The second deals with the nature of the love affair that is central to the script.
Alfred Hitchcock’s Fade to Black: The Great Director’s Final Days|David Freeman|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
It was his nature to be happy and jolly; he could not help radiating sunshine all the time.
The Boy Scouts of the Naval Reserve|Robert Shaler
Never surely was man better cut out by nature for the post of convent physician!
Letters of Two Brides|Honore de Balzac
Sufficient has been said to prove the superiority of spiritual life over the whole aspects and manifestations of Nature.
An Interpretation of Rudolf Eucken's Philosophy|W. Tudor Jones
Time and accident had changed him; moreover, he could bring art to the assistance of nature.
Lysbeth|H. Rider Haggard
He warily sounded a nature that could be warped to the exigencies of any plan, provided it was profitable.
Sons of the Soil|Honore de Balzac
British Dictionary definitions for nature
nature
/ (ˈneɪtʃə) /
noun
the fundamental qualities of a person or thing; identity or essential character
(often capital, esp when personified)the whole system of the existence, arrangement, forces, and events of all physical life that are not controlled by man
all natural phenomena and plant and animal life, as distinct from man and his creations
a wild primitive state untouched by man or civilization
natural unspoilt scenery or countryside
disposition or temperament
tendencies, desires, or instincts governing behaviour
the normal biological needs or urges of the body
sort; kind; character
the real appearance of a person or thinga painting very true to nature
accepted standards of basic morality or behaviour
biologythe complement of genetic material that partly determines the structure of an organism; genotypeCompare nurture (def. 3)
Irishsympathy and fondness for one's own people or native placeshe is full of nature
against natureunnatural or immoral
by natureessentially or innately
call of natureinformal, euphemistic, orjocularthe need to urinate or defecate
from natureusing natural models in drawing, painting, etc
in the nature oforof the nature ofessentially the same as; by way of
Word Origin for nature
C13: via Old French from Latin nātūra, from nātus, past participle of nascī to be born