A 'genuine' work is one written by the author whose name it bears; an 'authentic'
work is one which relates truthfully the matters of which it treats. For example, the
apocryphal Gospel of St. Thomas is neither 'genuine' nor 'authentic.' It is not
'genuine,' for St. Thomas did not write it; it is not 'authentic,' for its contents are
mainly fables and lies.
Trench On the Study of Words lect. vi, p. 189. [W. J. W.]
Authentic is, however, used by reputable writers as synonymous
with genuine, tho usually where genuineness carries a certain
authority. We speak of accepted conclusions, certain evidence,
current money, genuine letters, a legitimate conclusion or legitimate
authority, original manuscripts, real value, received interpretation,
sure proof, a true statement, a trustworthy witness, a
veritable discovery.
Antonyms:
| apocryphal, | counterfeit, | exploded, | false, | spurious, |
| baseless, | disputed, | fabulous, | fictitious, | unauthorized. |
AUXILIARY.
Synonyms:
| accessory, | ally, | coadjutor, | helper, | promoter, |
| aid, | assistant, | confederate, | mercenary, | subordinate. |
An auxiliary is a person or thing that helps in a subordinate[68]
capacity. Allies unite as equals; auxiliaries are, at least technically,
inferiors or subordinates. Yet the auxiliary is more
than a mere assistant. The word is oftenest found in the
plural, and in the military sense; auxiliaries are troops of one
nation uniting with the armies, and acting under the orders, of
another. Mercenaries serve only for pay; auxiliaries often for
reasons of state, policy, or patriotism as well. Compare ACCESSORY;
APPENDAGE.
Antonyms:
| antagonist, | hinderer, | opponent, | opposer. |
Prepositions:
The auxiliaries of the Romans; an auxiliary in a good cause;
an auxiliary to learning.
AVARICIOUS.
Synonyms:
| close, | greedy, | niggardly, | penurious, | sordid, |
| covetous, | miserly, | parsimonious, | rapacious, | stingy. |
Avaricious and covetous refer especially to acquisition, miserly,
niggardly, parsimonious, and penurious to expenditure. The
avaricious man has an eager craving for money, and ordinarily
desires both to get and to keep, the covetous man to get something
away from its possessor; tho one may be made avaricious by
the pressure of great expenditures. Miserly and niggardly persons
seek to gain by mean and petty savings; the miserly by stinting
themselves, the niggardly by stinting others. Parsimonious
and penurious may apply to one's outlay either for himself or for
others; in the latter use, they are somewhat less harsh and
reproachful terms than niggardly. The close man holds like a
vise all that he gets. Near and nigh are provincial words of similar
import. The rapacious have the robber instinct, and put it in
practise in some form, as far as they dare. The avaricious and
rapacious are ready to reach out for gain; the parsimonious,
miserly, and niggardly prefer the safer and less adventurous way
of avoiding expenditure. Greedy and stingy are used not only
of money, but often of other things, as food, etc. The greedy
child wishes to enjoy everything himself; the stingy child, to
keep others from getting it.
Antonyms:
| bountiful, | free, | generous, | liberal, | munificent, | prodigal, | wasteful. |
Preposition:
The monarch was avaricious of power.
[69]
AVENGE.
Synonyms:
| punish, | retaliate, | revenge, | vindicate, | visit. |
Avenge and revenge, once close synonyms, are now far apart in
meaning. To avenge is to visit some offense with punishment, in
order to vindicate the righteous, or to uphold and illustrate the
right by the suffering or destruction of the wicked. "And seeing
one of them suffer wrong, he avenged him that was oppressed,
and smote the Egyptian," Acts vii, 24. To revenge is to inflict
harm or suffering upon another through personal anger and resentment
at something done to ourselves. Avenge is unselfish; revenge
is selfish. Revenge, according to present usage, could not be said
of God. To retaliate may be necessary for self-defense, without
the idea of revenge. Compare REVENGE.
Prepositions:
Avenge on or upon (rarely, avenge oneself of) a wrong-doer.
AVOW.
Synonyms:
| knowledge, | aver, | confess, | own, | profess, | testify, |
| admit, | avouch, | declare, | proclaim, | protest, | witness. |
Acknowledge, admit, and declare refer either to oneself or to
others; all the other words refer only to one's own knowledge or
action. To avow is to declare boldly and openly, commonly as
something one is ready to justify, maintain, or defend. A man
acknowledges another's claim or his own promise; he admits an
opponent's advantage or his own error; he declares either what he
has seen or experienced or what he has received from another; he
avers what he is sure of from his own knowledge or consciousness;
he gives his assurance as the voucher for what he avouches;
he avows openly a belief or intention that he has silently held.
Avow and avouch take a direct object; aver is followed by a conjunction:
a man avows his faith, avouches a deed, avers that he
was present. Avow has usually a good sense; what a person
avows he at least does not treat as blameworthy, criminal, or
shameful; if he did, he would be said to confess it; yet there is
always the suggestion that some will be ready to challenge or censure
what one avows; as, the clergyman avowed his dissent from
the doctrine of his church. Own applies to all things, good or bad,
great or small, which one takes as his own. Compare CONFESS;
STATE.
Antonyms:
| contradict, | deny, | disavow, | disclaim, | disown, | ignore, | repudiate. |
[70]
AWFUL.
Synonyms:
| alarming, | direful, | frightful, | majestic, | solemn, |
| appalling, | dread, | grand, | noble, | stately, |
| august, | dreadful, | horrible, | portentous, | terrible, |
| dire, | fearful, | imposing, | shocking, | terrific. |
Awful should not be used of things which are merely disagreeable
or annoying, nor of all that are alarming and terrible, but
only of such as bring a solemn awe upon the soul, as in the presence
of a superior power; as, the awful hush before the battle.
That which is awful arouses an oppressive, that which is august
an admiring reverence; we speak of the august presence of a
mighty monarch, the awful presence of death. We speak of an
exalted station, a grand mountain, an imposing presence, a majestic
cathedral, a noble mien, a solemn litany, a stately march, an
august assembly, the awful scene of the Judgment Day.
Antonyms:
| base, | contemptible, | inferior, | paltry, |
| beggarly, | despicable, | lowly, | undignified, |
| commonplace, | humble, | mean, | vulgar. |
AWKWARD.
Synonyms:
| boorish, | clumsy, | rough, | unhandy, |
| bungling, | gawky, | uncouth, | unskilful. |
| clownish, | maladroit, | ungainly, |
Awkward, from awk (kindred with off, from the Norwegian),
is off-ward, turned the wrong way; it was anciently used of a
back-handed or left-handed blow in battle, of squinting eyes, etc.
Clumsy, on the other hand (from clumse, also through the Norwegian),
signifies benumbed, stiffened with cold; this is the original
meaning of clumsy fingers, clumsy limbs. Thus, awkward primarily
refers to action, clumsy to condition. A tool, a vehicle, or
the human frame may be clumsy in shape or build, awkward in
motion. The clumsy man is almost of necessity awkward, but
the awkward man may not be naturally clumsy. The finest untrained
colt is awkward in harness; a horse that is clumsy in build
can never be trained out of awkwardness. An awkward statement
has an uncomfortable, and perhaps recoiling force; a statement
that contains ill-assorted and incongruous material in ill-chosen
language is clumsy. We speak of an awkward predicament,
an awkward scrape. An awkward excuse commonly reflects
on the one who offers it. We say the admitted facts have an[71]
awkward appearance. In none of these cases could clumsy be
used. Clumsy is, however, applied to movements that seem as
unsuitable as those of benumbed and stiffened limbs. A dancing
bear is both clumsy and awkward.
Antonyms:
| adroit, | clever, | dexterous, | handy, | skilful. |
Prepositions:
The raw recruit is awkward in action; at the business.
AXIOM.
Synonym:
Both the axiom and the truism are instantly seen to be true,
and need no proof; but in an axiom there is progress of thought,
while the truism simply says the same thing over again, or says
what is too manifest to need saying. The axiom that "things
which are equal to the same thing are equal to one another"
unfolds in the latter part of the sentence the truth implied in the
first part, which might have been overlooked if not stated. In the
truism that "a man can do all he is capable of," the former and
the latter part of the sentence are simply identical, and the mind
is left just where it started. Hence the axiom is valuable and
useful, while the truism is weak and flat, unless the form of statement
makes it striking or racy, as "all fools are out of their wits."
Compare PROVERB.
Antonyms:
| absurdity, | contradiction, | demonstration, | nonsense, | paradox, | sophism. |
BABBLE.
Synonyms:
| blab, | cackle, | gabble, | murmur, | prattle, |
| blurt, | chat, | gossip, | palaver, | tattle, |
| blurt out, | chatter, | jabber, | prate, | twaddle. |
Most of these words are onomatopoetic. The cackle of a hen,
the gabble of a goose, the chatter of a magpie, the babble of a
running stream, as applied to human speech, indicate a rapid succession
of what are to the listener meaningless sounds. Blab and
blurt (commonly blurt out) refer to the letting out of what the
lips can no longer keep in; blab, of a secret; blurt out, of passionate
feeling. To chat is to talk in an easy, pleasant way, not
without sense, but without special purpose. Chatting is the practise
of adults, prattling that of children. To prate is to talk idly,[72]
presumptuously, or foolishly, but not necessarily incoherently.
To jabber is to utter a rapid succession of unintelligible sounds,
generally more noisy than chattering. To gossip is to talk of petty
personal matters, as for pastime or mischief. To twaddle is to
talk feeble nonsense. To murmur is to utter suppressed or even
inarticulate sounds, suggesting the notes of a dove, or the sound
of a running stream, and is used figuratively of the half suppressed
utterances of affection or pity, or of complaint, resentment,
etc. Compare SPEAK.
Prepositions:
Babies babble for the moon; the crowd babbles of a hero; the
sick man babbles of home.
BANISH.
Synonyms:
| ban, | dismiss, | evict, | expatriate, | ostracize, |
| discharge, | drive out, | exile, | expel, | oust. |
| dislodge, | eject, |
Banish, primarily to put under ban, to compel by authority
to leave a place or country, perhaps with restriction to some
other place or country. From a country, a person may be
banished, exiled, or expatriated; banished from any country
where he may happen to be, but expatriated or exiled only from
his own. One may expatriate or exile himself; he is banished
by others. Banish is a word of wide import; one may banish
disturbing thoughts; care may banish sleep. To expel is to drive
out with violence or rudeness, and so often with disgrace.
Prepositions:
Cataline was banished from Rome; John the Apostle was
banished to Patmos.
BANK.
Synonyms:
| beach, | bound, | brink, | edge, | margin, | shore, |
| border, | brim, | coast, | marge, | rim, | strand. |
Bank is a general term for the land along the edge of a water
course; it may also denote a raised portion of the bed of a river,
lake, or ocean; as, the Banks of Newfoundland. A beach is a
strip or expanse of incoherent wave-worn sand, which is often
pebbly or full of boulders; we speak of the beach of a lake or
ocean; a beach is sometimes found in the bend of a river. Strand
is a more poetic term for a wave-washed shore, especially as a
place for landing or embarking; as, the keel grates on the strand.[73]
The whole line of a country or continent that borders the sea is a
coast. Shore is any land, whether cliff, or sand, or marsh, bordering
water. We do not speak of the coast of a river, nor of the
banks of the ocean, tho there may be banks by or under the
sea. Edge is the line where land and water meet; as, the water's
edge. Brink is the place from which one may fall; as, the
river's brink; the brink of a precipice; the brink of ruin.
BANTER.
Synonyms:
| badinage, | derision, | jeering, | raillery, | sarcasm, |
| chaff, | irony, | mockery, | ridicule, | satire. |
Banter is the touching upon some fault, weakness, or fancied
secret of another in a way half to pique and half to please; badinage
is delicate, refined banter. Raillery has more sharpness,
but is usually good-humored and well meant. Irony, the saying
one thing that the reverse may be understood, may be either mild
or bitter. All the other words have a hostile intent. Ridicule
makes a person or thing the subject of contemptuous merriment;
derision seeks to make the object derided seem utterly despicable—to
laugh it to scorn. Chaff is the coarse witticism of the streets,
perhaps merry, oftener malicious; jeering is loud, rude ridicule,
as of a hostile crowd or mob. Mockery is more studied, and may
include mimicry and personal violence, as well as scornful speech.
A satire is a formal composition; a sarcasm may be an impromptu
sentence. The satire shows up follies to keep people from them;
the sarcasm hits them because they are foolish, without inquiring
whether it will do good or harm; the satire is plainly uttered; the
sarcasm is covert.
BARBAROUS.
Synonyms:
| atrocious, | brutal, | merciless, | uncivilized, |
| barbarian, | cruel, | rude, | uncouth, |
| barbaric, | inhuman, | savage, | untamed. |
Whatever is not civilized is barbarian; barbaric indicates rude
magnificence, uncultured richness; as, barbaric splendor, a barbaric
melody. Barbarous refers to the worst side of barbarian
life, and to revolting acts, especially of cruelty, such as a civilized
man would not be expected to do; as, a barbarous deed. We may,
however, say barbarous nations, barbarous tribes, without implying
anything more than want of civilization and culture. Savage[74]
is more distinctly bloodthirsty than barbarous. In this sense we
speak of a savage beast and of barbarous usage.
Antonyms:
| civilized, | cultured, | elegant, | humane, | polite, | tender, |
| courtly, | delicate, | graceful, | nice, | refined, | urbane. |
BARRIER.
Synonyms:
| bar, | bulwark, | obstruction, | rampart, |
| barricade, | hindrance, | parapet, | restraint, |
| breastwork, | obstacle, | prohibition, | restriction. |
A bar is something that is or may be firmly fixed, ordinarily
with intent to prevent entrance or egress; as, the bars of a prison
cell; the bars of a wood-lot. A barrier obstructs, but is not necessarily
impassable. Barrier is used of objects more extensive
than those to which bar is ordinarily applied. A mountain range
may be a barrier to exploration; but a mass of sand across the
entrance to a harbor is called a bar. Discovered falsehood is a
bar to confidence. Barricade has become practically a technical
name for an improvised street fortification, and, unless in some
way modified, is usually so understood. A parapet is a low or
breast-high wall, as about the edge of a roof, terrace, etc., especially,
in military use, such a wall for the protection of troops; a
rampart is the embankment surrounding a fort, on which the
parapet is raised; the word rampart is often used as including
the parapet. Bulwark is a general word for any defensive wall
or rampart; its only technical use at present is in nautical language,
where it signifies the raised side of a ship above the upper
deck, topped by the rail. Compare BOUNDARY; IMPEDIMENT.
Antonyms:
| admittance, | opening, | road, | transit, |
| entrance, | passage, | thoroughfare, | way. |
Prepositions:
A barrier to progress, against invasion; a barrier between
nations.
BATTLE.
Synonyms:
| action, | combat, | encounter, | passage of arms, |
| affair, | conflict, | engagement, | skirmish, |
| bout, | contest, | fight, | strife. |
Conflict is a general word which describes opponents, whether
individuals or hosts, as dashed together. One continuous conflict
between entire armies is a battle. Another battle may be fought
upon the same field after a considerable interval; or a new battle[75]
may follow immediately, the armies meeting upon a new field.
An action is brief and partial; a battle may last for days. Engagement
is a somewhat formal expression for battle; as, it was
the commander's purpose to avoid a general engagement. A protracted
war, including many battles, may be a stubborn contest.
Combat, originally a hostile encounter between individuals, is
now used also for extensive engagements. A skirmish is between
small detachments or scattered troops. An encounter may be
either purposed or accidental, between individuals or armed forces.
Fight is a word of less dignity than battle; we should not ordinarily
speak of Waterloo as a fight, unless where the word is used
in the sense of fighting; as, I was in the thick of the fight.
Antonyms:
| armistice, | concord, | peace, | suspension of hostilities, | truce. |
Prepositions:
A battle of giants; battle between armies; a battle for life,
against invaders; a battle to the death; the battle of (more rarely
at) Marathon.
BEAT.
Synonyms:
| bastinado, | chastise, | overcome, | spank, | thrash, |
| batter, | conquer, | pommel, | strike, | vanquish, |
| belabor, | cudgel, | pound, | surpass, | whip, |
| bruise, | defeat, | scourge, | switch, | worst. |
| castigate, | flog, | smite, |
Strike is the word for a single blow; to beat is to strike repeatedly,
as a bird beats the air with its wings. Others of the above
words describe the manner of beating, as bastinado, to beat on
the soles of the feet; belabor, to inflict a comprehensive and exhaustive
beating; cudgel, to beat with a stick; thrash, as wheat
was beaten out with the old hand-flail; to pound (akin to L. pondus,
a weight) is to beat with a heavy, and pommel with a blunt,
instrument. To batter and to bruise refer to the results of beating;
that is battered which is broken or defaced by repeated blows
on the surface (compare synonyms for SHATTER); that is bruised
which has suffered even one severe contusion. The metaphorical
sense of beat, however, so far preponderates that one may be very
badly bruised and battered, and yet not be said to be beaten, unless
he has got the worst of the beating. To beat a combatant is
to disable or dishearten him for further fighting. Hence beat becomes[76]
the synonym for every word which implies getting the advantage
of another. Compare CONQUER.
Antonyms:
| fail, | fall, | get the worst of, | go down, | go under, | surrender. |
Almost all antonyms in this class are passive, and can be formed
indefinitely from the conquering words by the use of the auxiliary
be; as, be beaten, be defeated, be conquered, etc.
Prepositions:
Beat with a stick over the head; beat by a trick; out of town;
beat to the ground; into submission.
BEAUTIFUL.
Synonyms:
| attractive, | charming, | exquisite, | handsome, |
| beauteous, | comely, | fair, | lovely, |
| bewitching, | delightful, | fine, | picturesque, |
| bonny, | elegant, | graceful, | pretty. |
The definition of beauty, "perfection of form," is a good key
to the meaning of beautiful, if we understand "form" in its widest
sense. There must also be harmony and unity, and in human beings
spiritual loveliness, to constitute an object or a person really
beautiful. Thus, we speak of a beautiful landscape, a beautiful
poem. But beautiful implies also, in concrete objects, softness of
outline and delicacy of mold; it is opposed to all that is hard and
rugged, hence we say a beautiful woman, but not a beautiful man.
Beautiful has the further limit of not transcending our powers of
appreciation. Pretty expresses in a far less degree that which is
pleasing to a refined taste in objects comparatively small, slight,
and dainty; as, a pretty bonnet; a pretty girl. That is handsome
which is not only superficially pleasing, but well and harmoniously
proportioned, with usually the added idea that it is made so by
art, breeding, or training; as, a handsome horse; a handsome
house. Handsome is a term far inferior to beautiful; we may
even say a handsome villain. Fair denotes what is bright, smooth,
clear, and without blemish; as, a fair face. The word applies
wholly to what is superficial; we can say "fair, yet false." In a
specific sense, fair has the sense of blond, as opposed to dark or brunette.
One who possesses vivacity, wit, good nature, or other
pleasing qualities may be attractive without beauty. Comely denotes
an aspect that is smooth, genial, and wholesome, with a certain
fulness of contour and pleasing symmetry, tho falling[77]
short of the beautiful; as, a comely matron. That is picturesque
which would make a striking picture.
Antonyms:
| awkward, | frightful, | grotesque, | repulsive, | uncouth, |
| clumsy, | ghastly, | hideous, | shocking, | ungainly, |
| deformed, | grim, | horrid, | ugly, | unlovely, |
| disgusting, | grisly, | odious, | unattractive, | unpleasant. |
Prepositions:
Beautiful to the eye; beautiful in appearance, in spirit;
"beautiful for situation," Ps. xlviii, 2; beautiful of aspect, of its
kind.
BECAUSE.
Synonyms:
| as, | for, | inasmuch as, | since. |
Because, literally by-cause, is the most direct and complete
word for giving the reason of a thing. Since, originally denoting
succession in time, signifies a succession in a chain of reasoning, a
natural inference or result. As indicates something like, coordinate,
parallel. Since is weaker than because; as is weaker than
since; either may introduce the reason before the main statement;
thus, since or as you are going, I will accompany you.
Often the weaker word is the more courteous, implying less constraint;
for example, as you request it, I will come, rather than I
will come because you request it. Inasmuch as is a formal and
qualified expression, implying by just so much, and no more;
thus, inasmuch as the debtor has no property, I abandon the
claim. For is a loose connective, giving often mere suggestion or
indication rather than reason or cause; as, it is morning, for (not
because) the birds are singing.
Antonyms:
| altho, | however, | nevertheless, | notwithstanding, | yet. |
Compare synonyms for BUT; NOTWITHSTANDING.
BECOMING.
Synonyms:
| befitting, | congruous, | fit, | meet, | seemly, |
| beseeming, | decent, | fitting, | neat, | suitable, |
| comely, | decorous, | graceful, | proper, | worthy. |
That is becoming in dress which suits the complexion, figure,
and other qualities of the wearer, so as to produce on the whole a
pleasing effect. That is decent which does not offend modesty or
propriety. That is suitable which is adapted to the age, station,
situation, and other circumstances of the wearer; coarse, heavy[78]
boots are suitable for farm-work; a juvenile style of dress is not
suitable for an old lady. In conduct much the same rules apply.
The dignity and gravity of a patriarch would not be becoming to
a child; at a funeral lively, cheery sociability would not be decorous,
while noisy hilarity would not be decent; sumptuous display
would not be suitable for a poor person. Fit is a compendious
term for whatever fits the person, time, place, occasion, etc.; as,
a fit person; a fit abode; a fit place. Fitting, or befitting, is somewhat
more elegant, implying a nicer adaptation. Meet, a somewhat
archaic word, expresses a moral fitness; as, meet for
heaven. Compare BEAUTIFUL.
Antonyms:
| awkward, | ill-fitting, | indecent, | unbecoming, | unseemly, |
| ill-becoming, | improper, | indecorous, | unfit, | unsuitable. |
Prepositions:
The dress was becoming to the wearer. Such conduct was becoming
in him.
BEGINNING.
Synonyms:
| arising, | inauguration, | origin, | source, |
| commencement, | inception, | outset, | spring, |
| fount, | initiation, | rise, | start. |
| fountain, | opening, |
The Latin commencement is more formal than the Saxon beginning,
as the verb commence, is more formal than begin. Commencement
is for the most part restricted to some form of action,
while beginning has no restriction, but may be applied to action,
state, material, extent, enumeration, or to whatever else may be
conceived of as having a first part, point, degree, etc. The letter
A is at the beginning (not the commencement) of every alphabet.
If we were to speak of the commencement of the Pacific Railroad,
we should be understood to refer to the enterprise and its initiatory
act; if we were to refer to the roadway we should say "Here is
the beginning of the Pacific Railroad." In the great majority of
cases begin and beginning are preferable to commence and commencement
as the simple, idiomatic English words, always accurate
and expressive. "In the beginning was the word," John i, 1. An
origin is the point from which something starts or sets out, often
involving, and always suggesting causal connection; as, the origin
of evil; the origin of a nation, a government, or a family. A
source is that which furnishes a first and continuous supply, that
which flows forth freely or may be readily recurred to; as, the
source of a river; a source of knowledge; a source of inspiration;[79]
fertile land is a source (not an origin) of wealth. A rise is thought
of as in an action; we say that a lake is the source of a certain
river, or that the river takes its rise from the lake. Motley wrote
of "The Rise of the Dutch Republic." Fount, fountain, and
spring, in their figurative senses, keep close to their literal meaning.
Compare CAUSE.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for END.
BEHAVIOR.
Synonyms:
| action, | breeding, | conduct, | deportment, | manner, |
| bearing, | carriage, | demeanor, | life, | manners. |
Behavior is our action in the presence of others; conduct includes
also that which is known only to ourselves and our Maker.
Carriage expresses simply the manner of holding the body, especially
in sitting or walking, as when it is said of a lady "she has a
fine carriage." Bearing refers to the bodily expression of feeling
or disposition; as, a haughty bearing; a noble bearing. Demeanor
is the bodily expression, not only of feelings, but of moral states;
as, a devout demeanor. Breeding, unless with some adverse limitation,
denotes that manner and conduct which result from good
birth and training. Deportment is behavior as related to a set of
rules; as, the pupil's deportment was faultless. A person's manner
may be that of a moment, or toward a single person; his manners
are his habitual style of behavior toward or before others,
especially in matters of etiquette and politeness; as, good manners
are always pleasing.
Prepositions:
The behavior of the pastor to or toward his people, on or upon
the streets, before the multitude, or in the church, with the godly,
or with the worldly, was alike faultless.
BEND.
Synonyms:
| bias, | curve, | diverge, | mold, | submit, | twist, |
| bow, | deflect, | incline, | persuade, | turn, | warp, |
| crook, | deviate, | influence, | stoop, | twine, | yield. |
In some cases a thing is spoken of as bent where the parts
make an angle; but oftener to bend is understood to be to draw
to or through a curve; as, to bend a bow. To submit or yield is to
bend the mind humbly to another's wishes. To incline or influence
is to bend another's wishes toward our own; to persuade is to[80]
draw them quite over. To warp is to bend silently through the
whole fiber, as a board in the sun. To crook is to bend irregularly,
as a crooked stick. Deflect, deviate, and diverge are said of
any turning away; deviate commonly of a slight and gradual
movement, diverge of a more sharp and decided one. To bias is
to cut across the texture, or incline to one side; in figurative use
always with an unfavorable import. Mold is a stronger work
than bend; we may bend by a superior force that which still resists
the constraint; as, a bent bow; we mold something plastic
entirely to some desired form.
BENEVOLENCE.
Synonyms:
| almsgiving, | charity, | kind-heartedness, | munificence, |
| beneficence, | generosity, | kindliness, | philanthropy, |
| benignity, | good-will, | kindness, | sympathy, |
| bounty, | humanity, | liberality, | unselfishness. |
According to the etymology and original usage, beneficence is
the doing well, benevolence the wishing or willing well to others;
but benevolence has come to include beneficence, and to displace
it. We should not now speak of benevolence which did not help,
unless where there was no power to help; even then we should
rather say good-will or sympathy. Charity, which originally
meant the purest love for God and man (as in 1 Cor. xiii), is now
almost universally applied to some form of almsgiving, and is
much more limited in meaning than benevolence. Benignity suggests
some occult power of blessing, such as was formerly ascribed
to the stars; we may say a good man has an air of benignity.
Kindness and tenderness are personal; benevolence and charity
are general. Kindness extends to all sentient beings, whether men
or animals, in prosperity or in distress. Tenderness especially
goes out toward the young, feeble, and needy, or even to the dead.
Humanity is so much kindness and tenderness toward man or beast
as it would be inhuman not to have; we say of some act of care or
kindness, "common humanity requires it." Generosity is self-forgetful
kindness in disposition or action; it includes much besides
giving; as, the generosity of forgiveness. Bounty applies to
ample giving, which on a larger scale is expressed by munificence.
Liberality indicates broad, genial kindly views, whether manifested
in gifts or otherwise. We speak of the bounty of a generous
host, the liberality or munificence of the founder of a college,
or of the liberality of a theologian toward the holders of conflicting[81]
beliefs. Philanthropy applies to wide schemes for human
welfare, often, but not always, involving large expenditures in
charity or benevolence. Compare MERCY.
Antonyms:
| barbarity, | greediness, | ill-will, | malignity, | self-seeking, |
| brutality, | harshness, | inhumanity, | niggardliness, | stinginess, |
| churlishness, | illiberality, | malevolence, | selfishness, | unkindness. |
Prepositions:
Benevolence of, on the part of, or from the wealthy, to or
toward the poor.
BIND.
Synonyms:
| compel, | fetter, | oblige, | restrict, | shackle, |
| engage, | fix, | restrain, | secure, | tie. |
| fasten, |
Binding is primarily by something flexible, as a cord or bandage
drawn closely around an object or group of objects, as when
we bind up a wounded limb. We bind a sheaf of wheat with a
cord; we tie the cord in a knot; we fasten by any means that
will make things hold together, as a board by nails, or a door by a
lock. The verbs tie and fasten are scarcely used in the figurative
sense, tho, using the noun, we speak of the ties of affection.
Bind has an extensive figurative use. One is bound by conscience
or honor; he is obliged by some imperious necessity; engaged by
his own promise; compelled by physical force or its moral equivalent.
Antonyms:
| free, | loose, | set free, | unbind, | unfasten, | unloose, | untie. |
Prepositions:
Bind to a pillar; unto an altar; to a service; bind one with
chains or in chains; one is bound by a contract; a splint is bound
upon a limb; the arms may be bound to the sides or behind the
back; bind a wreath about, around, or round the head; twigs
are bound in or into fagots; for military purposes, they are bound
at both ends and in the middle; one is bound by a contract, or
bound under a penalty to fulfil a contract.
BITTER.
Synonyms:
| acerb, | acidulous, | caustic, | pungent, | stinging, |
| acetous, | acrid, | cutting, | savage, | tart, |
| acid, | acrimonious, | harsh, | sharp, | vinegarish, |
| acidulated, | biting, | irate, | sour, | virulent. |
Acid, sour, and bitter agree in being contrasted with sweet, but[82]
the two former are sharply distinguished from the latter. Acid
or sour is the taste of vinegar or lemon-juice; bitter that of quassia,
quinine, or strychnine. Acrid is nearly allied to bitter. Pungent
suggests the effect of pepper or snuff on the organs of taste
or smell; as, a pungent odor. Caustic indicates the corroding
effect of some strong chemical, as nitrate of silver. In a figurative
sense, as applied to language or character, these words are very
closely allied. We say a sour face, sharp words, bitter complaints,
caustic wit, cutting irony, biting sarcasm, a stinging taunt, harsh
judgment, a tart reply. Harsh carries the idea of intentional and
severe unkindness, bitter of a severity that arises from real or supposed
ill treatment. The bitter speech springs from the sore heart.
Tart and sharp utterances may not proceed from an intention to
wound, but merely from a wit recklessly keen; cutting, stinging,
and biting speech indicates more or less of hostile intent, the latter
being the more deeply malicious. The caustic utterance is meant
to burn, perhaps wholesomely, as in the satire of Juvenal or Cervantes.
Compare MOROSE.
Antonyms:
| dulcet, | honeyed, | luscious, | nectared, | saccharine, | sweet. |
BLEACH, v.
Synonyms:
| blanch, | make white, | whiten, | whitewash. |
To whiten is to make white in general, but commonly it means
to overspread with white coloring-matter. Bleach and blanch
both signify to whiten by depriving of color, the former permanently,
as linen; the latter either permanently (as, to blanch celery)
or temporarily (as, to blanch the cheek with fear). To whitewash
is to whiten superficially, especially by false approval.
Antonyms:
| blacken, | color, | darken, | dye, | soil, | stain. |
BLEMISH.
Synonyms:
| blot, | defacement, | disgrace, | injury, | spot, |
| blur, | defect, | dishonor, | reproach, | stain, |
| brand, | deformity, | fault, | smirch, | stigma, |
| crack, | dent, | flaw, | soil, | taint, |
| daub, | disfigurement, | imperfection, | speck, | tarnish. |
Whatever mars the beauty or completeness of an object is a
blemish, whether original, as squinting eyes, or the result of accident
or disease, etc., as the pits of smallpox. A blemish is superficial;
a flaw or taint is in structure or substance. In the moral[83]
sense, we speak of a blot or stain upon reputation; a flaw or taint
in character. A defect is the want or lack of something; fault,
primarily a failing, is something that fails of an apparent intent
or disappoints a natural expectation; thus a sudden dislocation or
displacement of geological strata is called a fault. Figuratively,
a blemish comes from one's own ill-doing; a brand or stigma is
inflicted by others; as, the brand of infamy.
BLOW.
Synonyms:
| box, | concussion, | disaster, | misfortune, | stripe, |
| buffet, | cuff, | knock, | rap, | stroke, |
| calamity, | cut, | lash, | shock, | thump. |
A blow is a sudden impact, as of a fist or a club; a stroke is a
sweeping movement; as, the stroke of a sword, of an oar, of the
arm in swimming. A shock is the sudden encounter with some
heavy body; as, colliding railway-trains meet with a shock; the
shock of battle. A slap is given with the open hand, a lash with
a whip, thong, or the like; we speak also of the cut of a whip. A
buffet or cuff is given only with the hand; a blow either with hand
or weapon. A cuff is a somewhat sidelong blow, generally with
the open hand; as, a cuff or box on the ear. A stripe is the effect
or mark of a stroke. In the metaphorical sense, blow is used for
sudden, stunning, staggering calamity or sorrow; stroke for
sweeping disaster, and also for sweeping achievement and success.
We say a stroke of paralysis, or a stroke of genius. We speak of
the buffets of adverse fortune. Shock is used of that which is at
once sudden, violent, and prostrating; we speak of a shock of
electricity, the shock of an amputation, a shock of surprise. Compare
BEAT.
BLUFF.
Synonyms:
| abrupt, | brusk, | impolite, | rough, |
| blunt, | coarse, | inconsiderate, | rude, |
| blustering, | discourteous, | open, | uncivil, |
| bold, | frank, | plain-spoken, | unmannerly. |
Bluff is a word of good meaning, as are frank and open. The
bluff man talks and laughs loudly and freely, says and does whatever
he pleases with fearless good nature, and with no thought of
annoying or giving pain to others. The blunt man says things
which he is perfectly aware are disagreeable, either from a defiant
indifference to others' feelings, or from the pleasure of tormenting.
Antonyms:
| bland, | courteous, | genial, | polished, | polite, | refined, | reserved, | urbane. |
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BODY.
Synonyms:
| ashes, | clay, | dust, | frame, | system, |
| carcass, | corpse, | form, | remains, | trunk. |
Body denotes the entire physical structure, considered as a
whole, of man or animal; form looks upon it as a thing of shape
and outline, perhaps of beauty; frame regards it as supported by
its bony framework; system views it as an assemblage of many
related and harmonious organs. Body, form, frame, and system
may be either dead or living; clay and dust are sometimes so used
in religious or poetic style, tho ordinarily these words are used
only of the dead. Corpse and remains are used only of the dead.
Corpse is the plain technical word for a dead body still retaining
its unity; remains may be used after any lapse of time; the latter
is also the more refined and less ghastly term; as, friends are
invited to view the remains. Carcass applies only to the body of
an animal, or of a human being regarded with contempt and
loathing. Compare COMPANY.
Antonyms:
| intellect, | intelligence, | mind, | soul, | spirit. |
BOTH.
Synonyms:
Both refers to two objects previously mentioned, or had in
mind, viewed or acting in connection; as, both men fired at once;
"two men fired" might mean any two, out of any number, and
without reference to any previous thought or mention. Twain is
a nearly obsolete form of two. The two, or the twain, is practically
equivalent to both; both, however, expresses a closer unity.
We would say both men rushed against the enemy; the two men
flew at each other. Compare EVERY.
Antonyms:
| each, | either, | every, | neither, | none, | no one, | not any. |
BOUNDARY.
Synonyms:
| barrier, | confines, | limit, | margin, |
| border, | edge, | line, | term, |
| bound, | enclosure, | marches, | termination, |
| bourn, | frontier, | marge, | verge. |
| bourne, | landmark, |
The boundary was originally the landmark, that which
marked off one piece of territory from another. The bound is the[85]
limit, marked or unmarked. Now, however, the difference between
the two words has come to be simply one of usage. As
regards territory, we speak of the boundaries of a nation or of an
estate; the bounds of a college, a ball-ground, etc. Bounds may
be used for all within the limits, boundary for the limiting line
only. Boundary looks to that which is without; bound only to
that which is within. Hence we speak of the bounds, not the
boundaries, of a subject, of the universe, etc.; we say the students
were forbidden to go beyond the bounds. A barrier is something
that bars ingress or egress. A barrier may be a boundary,
as was the Great Wall of China. Bourn, or bourne, is a poetical
expression for bound or boundary. A border is a strip of land
along the boundary. Edge is a sharp terminal line, as where
river or ocean meets the land. Limit is now used almost wholly
in the figurative sense; as, the limit of discussion, of time, of
jurisdiction. Line is a military term; as, within the lines, or
through the lines, of an army. Compare BARRIER; END.
Antonyms:
| center, | citadel, | estate, | inside, | interior, | land, | region, | territory. |
Prepositions:
The boundaries of an estate; the boundary between neighboring
territories.
BRAVE.
Synonyms:
| adventurous, | courageous, | fearless, | undaunted, |
| bold, | daring, | gallant, | undismayed, |
| chivalric, | dauntless, | heroic, | valiant, |
| chivalrous, | doughty, | intrepid, | venturesome. |
The adventurous man goes in quest of danger; the bold man
stands out and faces danger or censure; the brave man combines
confidence with resolution in presence of danger; the chivalrous man
puts himself in peril for others' protection. The daring step out
to defy danger; the dauntless will not flinch before anything that
may come to them; the doughty will give and take limitless hard
knocks. The adventurous find something romantic in dangerous
enterprises; the venturesome may be simply heedless, reckless, or
ignorant. All great explorers have been adventurous; children,
fools, and criminals are venturesome. The fearless and intrepid
possess unshaken nerves in any place of danger. Courageous
is more than brave, adding a moral element: the courageous man
steadily encounters perils to which he may be keenly sensitive, at
the call of duty; the gallant are brave in a dashing, showy, and[86]
splendid way; the valiant not only dare great dangers, but
achieve great results; the heroic are nobly daring and dauntless,
truly chivalrous, sublimely courageous. Compare FORTITUDE.
Antonyms:
| afraid, | cringing, | fearful, | pusillanimous, | timid, |
| cowardly, | faint-hearted, | frightened, | shrinking, | timorous. |
BREAK.
Synonyms:
| bankrupt, | crack, | destroy, | rive, | shatter, | split, |
| burst, | crush, | fracture, | rupture, | shiver, | sunder, |
| cashier, | demolish, | rend, | sever, | smash, | transgress. |
To break is to divide sharply, with severance of particles, as by
a blow or strain. To burst is to break by pressure from within, as a
bombshell, but it is used also for the result of violent force otherwise
exerted; as, to burst in a door, where the door yields as if
to an explosion. To crush is to break by pressure from without,
as an egg-shell. To crack is to break without complete severance
of parts; a cracked cup or mirror may still hold together. Fracture
has a somewhat similar sense. In a fractured limb, the ends
of the broken bone may be separated, tho both portions are
still retained within the common muscular tissue. A shattered
object is broken suddenly and in numerous directions; as, a vase
is shattered by a blow, a building by an earthquake. A shivered
glass is broken into numerous minute, needle-like fragments. To
smash is to break thoroughly to pieces with a crashing sound by
some sudden act of violence; a watch once smashed will scarcely
be worth repair. To split is to cause wood to crack or part in the
way of the grain, and is applied to any other case where a natural
tendency to separation is enforced by an external cause; as, to
split a convention or a party. To demolish is to beat down, as a
mound, building, fortress, etc.; to destroy is to put by any process
beyond restoration physically, mentally, or morally; to destroy
an army is so to shatter and scatter it that it can not be rallied or
reassembled as a fighting force. Compare REND.
Antonyms:
| attach, | bind, | fasten, | join, | mend, | secure, | solder, | unite, | weld. |
Prepositions:
Break to pieces, or in pieces, into several pieces (when the object
is thought of as divided rather than shattered); break with a
friend; from or away from a suppliant; break into a house; out
of prison; break across one's knee; break through a hedge; break
in upon one's retirement; break over the rules; break on or upon
the shore, against the rocks.
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