CĂRȚI ÎN ENGLEZĂ ÎN LEGĂTURĂ CU «EMULOUSNESS»
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1
The Emotions of the Ancient Greeks: Studies in Aristotle and ...
... catalogue are directed principally at agents, above all human agents. One
does not feel pity, indignation, envy, or emulousness at the successes or failures
of inanimate things, nor again gratitude, anger, hatred, or shame, in Aristotle's
view.
2
Aristotle, Emotions, and Education
'Emulousness' and 'shamefulness' may be more appropriate terms to denote the
virtuous traits in question. Notably, the word 'shame' can refer to an episodic
emotion and to a disposition; the two meanings cohabited in Greek as they do in
...
Professor Kristján Kristjánsson,
2012
3
Preferential Trade: A Study of Its Esoteric Meaning
Emulousness, being a part of our common nature, can never be stamped out ;
and if it could, it would be only at the cost of producing an emasculated race.
Emulousness bears no inward likeness to you. The desire in 1 Smith, Wealth 0/
Nationt ...
4
Autology: An Inductive System of Mental Science; Whose ...
This is the last of the elemental affections, and is compounded of them all.
Desirefulness with its love, Trustfulness with its peace, Hopefulness with its joy,
Cheerful uess with its gladness, Aspiringness with its playfulness, emulousness,
and its ...
David Henry Hamilton,
1873
5
A Gaelic Dictionary in Two Parts. To which is Prefixed a New ...
Spairx, v. n. Strive, struggle, wrestle. — Shaw. Sp^uineach, a. Emulous;
struggling; striving; making an effort; wrestling; causing émulation, struggle, or
strife. Spairneaçhd, s.s. Emulousness; rivalry; continued or fréquent émulation ;
wrestling.
Robert Archibald Armstrong,
1825
6
Passion's Triumph Over Reason: A History of the Moral ...
157). Fates as ugly as the latter are possible because the glory market fosters the
violently competitive passions of envy (1. 168) and emulousness (11. 150, 183).
125 If Achilles himself does not embrace such self-regarding affections, he will ...
Christopher Tilmouth,
2010
7
A Gaelic Dictionary: In Two Parts I. Guelic and English. - ...
Spain, v. n. Strive, struggle, wrestle. — Shaw. Spairneacii, a. Emulous; struggling;
striving; making an effort ; wrestling; causing emulation, struggle, or strife. Spai
rneachd, s.f. Emulousness ; rivalry; continued or frequent emulation ; wrestling.
Robert Archibald Armstrong,
1825
8
Dictionaries in Early Modern Europe: Lexicography and the ...
This was well-informed emulousness: he knew the great Latin dictionary
intimately, not as an ordinary user but as a highly interactive one, who annotated
a copy so heavily in or after the 1570s as to suggest that he may have hoped to
prepare ...
... which the earth wears: here a thread or tress of forward green, there a shock of
the old dead gray or brown. It is April, — witnessed by the wild mob-rule conduct
of the grass, its pushing emulousness, in which, for no plain reason, one blade ...
10
The Comprehensive Speaker: Designed for the Use of Schools, ...
We look to them from our new world — not unrenowned, yet a new world still —
and the blood mounts to our cheeks ; our eyes swim ; our voices are stifled with
emulousness of so much glory ; their trophies will not let us sleep ; but there is no
...