DELIBERATE.
Synonyms:
| confer, | consult, | meditate, | reflect, |
| consider, | debate, | ponder, | weigh. |
An individual considers, meditates, ponders, reflects, by himself;
he weighs a matter in his own mind, and is sometimes said
even to debate with himself. Consult and confer always imply
two or more persons, as does debate, unless expressly limited as
above. Confer suggests the interchange of counsel, advice, or information;
consult indicates almost exclusively the receiving of
it. A man confers with his associates about a new investment;
he consults his physician about his health; he may confer with
him on matters of general interest. He consults a dictionary, but
does not confer with it. Deliberate, which can be applied to a
single individual, is also the word for a great number, while
consult is ordinarily limited to a few; a committee consults; an
assembly deliberates. Deliberating always carries the idea of
slowness; consulting is compatible with haste; we can speak of a
hasty consultation, not of a hasty deliberation. Debate implies
opposing views; deliberate, simply a gathering and balancing of[126]
all facts and reasons. We consider or deliberate with a view to
action, while meditation may be quite purposeless.
Prepositions:
We deliberate on or upon, also about or concerning a matter:
the first two are preferable.
DELICIOUS.
Synonyms:
| dainty, | delightful, | exquisite, | luscious, | savory. |
That is delicious which affords a gratification at once vivid and
delicate to the senses, especially to those of taste and smell; as,
delicious fruit; a delicious odor; luscious has a kindred but more
fulsome meaning, inclining toward a cloying excess of sweetness
or richness. Savory is applied chiefly to cooked food made palatable
by spices and condiments. Delightful may be applied to the
higher gratifications of sense, as delightful music, but is chiefly
used for that which is mental and spiritual. Delicious has a limited
use in this way; as, a delicious bit of poetry; the word is
sometimes used ironically for some pleasing absurdity; as, this is
delicious! Compare DELIGHTFUL.
Antonyms:
| acrid, | bitter, | loathsome, | nauseous, | repulsive, | unpalatable, | unsavory. |
DELIGHTFUL.
Synonyms:
| acceptable, | delicious, | pleasant, | refreshing, |
| agreeable, | grateful, | pleasing, | satisfying, |
| congenial, | gratifying, | pleasurable, | welcome. |
Agreeable refers to whatever gives a mild degree of pleasure;
as, an agreeable perfume. Acceptable indicates a thing to be
worthy of acceptance; as, an acceptable offering. Grateful is
stronger than agreeable or gratifying, indicating whatever awakens
a feeling akin to gratitude. A pleasant face and pleasing manners
arouse pleasurable sensations, and make the possessor an
agreeable companion; if possessed of intelligence, vivacity, and
goodness, such a person's society will be delightful. Criminals
may find each other's company congenial, but scarcely delightful.
Satisfying denotes anything that is received with calm acquiescence,
as substantial food, or established truth. That is welcome
which is received with joyful heartiness; as, welcome tidings.
Compare BEAUTIFUL; CHARMING; DELICIOUS.
Antonyms:
| depressing, | distressing, | horrible, | miserable, | painful, | woful, |
| disappointing, | hateful, | melancholy, | mournful, | saddening, | wretched. |
[127]
DELUSION.
Synonyms:
| error, | fallacy, | hallucination, | illusion, | phantasm. |
A delusion is a mistaken conviction, an illusion a mistaken perception
or inference. An illusion may be wholly of the senses; a
delusion always involves some mental error. In an optical illusion
the observer sees either what does not exist, or what exists otherwise
than as he sees it, as when in a mirage distant springs and
trees appear close at hand. We speak of the illusions of fancy or
of hope, but of the delusions of the insane. A hallucination is a
false image or belief which has nothing, outside of the disordered
mind, to suggest it; as, the hallucinations of delirium tremens.
Compare DECEPTION; INSANITY.
Antonyms:
| actuality, | certainty, | fact, | reality, | truth, | verity. |
DEMOLISH.
Synonyms:
| destroy, | overthrow, | overturn, | raze, | ruin. |
A building, monument, or other structure is demolished when
reduced to a shapeless mass; it is razed when leveled with the
ground; it is destroyed when its structural unity is gone, whether
or not its component parts remain. An edifice is destroyed by
fire or earthquake; it is demolished by bombardment; it is ruined
when, by violence or neglect, it has become unfit for human habitation.
Compare ABOLISH; BREAK.
Antonyms:
| build, | construct, | create, | make, | repair, | restore. |
DEMONSTRATION.
Synonyms:
| certainty, | consequence, | evidence, | inference, |
| conclusion, | deduction, | induction, | proof. |
Demonstration, in the strict and proper sense, is the highest
form of proof, and gives the most absolute certainty, but can not
be applied outside of pure mathematics or other strictly deductive
reasoning; there can be proof and certainty, however, in
matters that do not admit of demonstration. A conclusion is
the absolute and necessary result of the admission of certain premises;
an inference is a probable conclusion toward which known
facts, statements, or admissions point, but which they do not absolutely
establish; sound premises, together with their necessary
conclusion, constitute a demonstration. Evidence is that which[128]
tends to show a thing to be true; in the widest sense, as including
self-evidence or consciousness, it is the basis of all knowledge.
Proof in the strict sense is complete, irresistible evidence; as,
there was much evidence against the accused, but not amounting
to proof of guilt. Moral certainty is a conviction resting on such
evidence as puts a matter beyond reasonable doubt, while not so
irresistible as demonstration. Compare HYPOTHESIS; INDUCTION.
DESIGN.
Synonyms:
| aim, | final cause, | object, | proposal, |
| device, | intent, | plan, | purpose, |
| end, | intention, | project, | scheme. |
Design refers to the adaptation of means to an end, the correspondence
and coordination of parts, or of separate acts, to produce
a result; intent and purpose overleap all particulars, and fasten on
the end itself. Intention is simply the more familiar form of the
legal and philosophical intent. Plan relates to details of form,
structure, and action, in themselves; design considers these same
details all as a means to an end. The plan of a campaign may be
for a series of sharp attacks, with the design of thus surprising and
overpowering the enemy. A man comes to a fixed intention to
kill his enemy; he forms a plan to entrap him into his power,
with the design of then compassing his death; as the law can not
read the heart, it can only infer the intent from the evidences of
design. Intent denotes a straining, stretching forth toward an object;
purpose simply the placing it before oneself; hence, we
speak of the purpose rather than the intent or intention of God.
We hold that the marks of design in nature prove it the work of
a great Designer. Intention contemplates the possibility of
failure; purpose looks to assured success; intent or intention refers
especially to the state of mind of the actor; purpose to the
result of the action. Compare AIM; CAUSE; IDEA; MODEL.
Prepositions:
The design of defrauding; the design of a building; a design
for a statue.
DESIRE.
Synonyms:
| appetency, | concupiscence, | hankering, | proclivity, |
| appetite, | coveting, | inclination, | propensity, |
| aspiration, | craving, | longing, | wish. |
Inclination is the mildest of these terms; it is a quiet, or even
a vague or unconscious, tendency. Even when we speak of a[129]
strong or decided inclination we do not express the intensity of
desire. Desire has a wide range, from the highest objects to the
lowest; desire is for an object near at hand, or near in thought,
and viewed as attainable; a wish may be for what is remote or
uncertain, or even for what is recognized as impossible. Craving
is stronger than hankering; hankering may be the result of a fitful
and capricious appetite; craving may be the imperious and
reasonable demand of the whole nature. Longing is a reaching
out with deep and persistent demand for that which is viewed as
now distant but at some time attainable; as, the captive's longing
for release. Coveting ordinarily denotes wrong desire for that
which is another's. Compare APPETITE.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for ANTIPATHY.
Prepositions:
The desire of fame; a desire for excellence.
DESPAIR.
Synonyms:
| desperation, | despondency, | discouragement, | hopelessness. |
Discouragement is the result of so much repulse or failure as
wears out courage. Discouragements too frequent and long
continued may produce a settled hopelessness. Hopelessness is
negative, and may result from simple apathy; despondency and
despair are more emphatic and decided. Despondency is an incapacity
for the present exercise of hope; despair is the utter abandonment
of hope. Despondency relaxes energy and effort and is
always attended with sadness or distress; despair may produce a
stony calmness, or it may lead to desperation. Desperation is
energized despair, vigorous in action, reckless of consequences.
Antonyms:
| anticipation, | cheer, | courage, | encouragement, | expectation, | hopefulness, |
| assurance, | confidence, | elation, | expectancy, | hope, | trust. |
DEXTERITY.
Synonyms:
| adroitness, | aptitude, | cleverness, | expertness, | readiness, | skill. |
Adroitness (F. à, to, and droit, right) and dexterity (L. dexter,
right, right-hand) might each be rendered "right-handedness;"
but adroitness carries more of the idea of eluding, parrying, or
checking some hostile movement, or taking advantage of another
in controversy; dexterity conveys the idea of doing, accomplishing
something readily and well, without reference to any action[130]
of others. We speak of adroitness in fencing, boxing, or debate;
of dexterity in horsemanship, in the use of tools, weapons, etc.
Aptitude (L. aptus, fit, fitted) is a natural readiness, which by
practise may be developed into dexterity. Skill is more exact to
line, rule, and method than dexterity. Dexterity can not be communicated,
and, oftentimes can not even be explained by its possessor;
skill to a very great extent can be imparted; "skilled
workmen" in various trades are numbered by thousands. Compare
ADDRESS; CLEVER; POWER; SKILFUL.
Prepositions:
Dexterity of hand, of movement, of management; with the
pen; in action, in manipulating men; at cards.
DICTION.
Synonyms:
| expression, | phrase, | style, | vocabulary, |
| language, | phraseology, | verbiage, | wording. |
An author's diction is strictly his choice and use of words,
with no special reference to thought; expression regards the
words simply as the vehicle of the thought. Phrase and phraseology
apply to words or combinations of words which are somewhat
technical; as, in legal phraseology; in military phrase.
Diction is general; wording is limited; we speak of the diction
of an author or of a work, the wording of a proposition, of a resolution,
etc. Verbiage never bears this sense (see CIRCUMLOCUTION.)
The language of a writer or speaker may be the national
speech he employs; as, the English or French language; or the
word may denote his use of that language; as, the author's language
is well (or ill) chosen. Style includes diction, expression,
rhetorical figures such as metaphor and simile, the effect of an
author's prevailing tone of thought, of his personal traits—in
short, all that makes up the clothing of thought in words; thus,
we speak of a figurative style, a frigid or an argumentative style,
etc., or of the style of Macaulay, Prescott, or others. An author's
vocabulary is the range of words which he brings into his use.
Compare LANGUAGE.
DIE.
Synonyms:
| cease, | decline, | expire, | perish, |
| decease, | depart, | fade, | wither. |
Die, to go out of life, become destitute of vital power and[131]
action, is figuratively applied to anything which has the appearance
of life.
Where the dying night-lamp flickers.
Tennyson Locksley Hall st. 40.
An echo, a strain of music, a tempest, a topic, an issue, dies. Expire
(literally, to breathe out) is a softer word for die; it is used
figuratively of things that cease to exist by reaching a natural
limit; as, a lease expires; the time has expired. To perish (literally,
in Latin, to go through, as in English we say, "the fire
goes out") is oftenest used of death by privation or exposure; as,
"I perish with hunger," Luke xv, 17; sometimes, of death by
violence. Knowledge and fame, art and empires, may be said to
perish; the word denotes utter destruction and decay.
Antonyms:
| be born, | come into being, | flourish, | rise again, |
| begin, | come to life, | grow, | rise from the dead, |
| be immortal, | exist, | live, | survive. |
Prepositions:
To die of fever; by violence; rarely, with the sword, famine,
etc. (Ezek. vii, 15); to die for one's country; to die at sea; in
one's bed; in agony; die to the world.
DIFFERENCE.
Synonyms:
| contrariety, | discrimination, | distinction, | inequality, |
| contrast, | disparity, | divergence, | unlikeness, |
| disagreement, | dissimilarity, | diversity, | variation, |
| discrepancy, | dissimilitude, | inconsistency, | variety. |
Difference is the state or quality of being unlike or the amount
of such unlikeness. A difference is in the things compared; a
discrimination is in our judgment of them; a distinction is in
our definition or description or mental image of them. Careful
discrimination of real differences results in clear distinctions.
Disparity is stronger than inequality, implying that one thing
falls far below another; as, the disparity of our achievements
when compared with our ideals. Dissimilarity is between things
sharply contrasted; there may be a difference between those almost
alike. There is a discrepancy in accounts that fail to balance.
Variety involves more than two objects; so, in general,
does diversity; variation is a difference in the condition or action
of the same object at different times. Disagreement is not merely
the lack, but the opposite, of agreement; it is a mild word for
opposition and conflict; difference is sometimes used in the same
sense.
[132]
Antonyms:
| agreement, | harmony, | likeness, | sameness, | uniformity, |
| consonance, | identity, | resemblance, | similarity, | unity. |
Prepositions:
Difference between the old and the new; differences among
men; a difference in character; of action; of style; (less frequently)
a difference (controversy) with a person; a difference of
one thing from (incorrectly to) another.
DIFFICULT.
Synonyms:
| arduous, | hard, | onerous, | toilsome, |
| exhausting, | laborious, | severe, | trying. |
Arduous (L. arduus, steep) signifies primarily so steep and lofty
as to be difficult of ascent, and hence applies to that which involves
great and sustained exertion and ordinarily for a lofty aim; great
learning can only be won by arduous toil. Hard applies to anything
that resists our endeavors as a scarcely penetrable mass resists
our physical force. Anything is hard that involves tax and
strain whether of the physical or mental powers. Difficult is not
used of that which merely taxes physical force; a dead lift is
called hard rather than difficult; breaking stone on the road
would be called hard rather than difficult work; that is difficult
which involves skill, sagacity, or address, with or without a considerable
expenditure of physical force; a geometrical problem
may be difficult to solve, a tangled skein to unravel; a mountain
difficult to ascend. Hard may be active or passive; a thing may
be hard to do or hard to bear. Arduous is always active. That
which is laborious or toilsome simply requires the steady application
of labor or toil till accomplished; toilsome is the stronger
word. That which is onerous (L. onus, a burden) is mentally burdensome
or oppressive. Responsibility may be onerous even when
it involves no special exertion.
Antonyms:
| easy, | facile, | light, | pleasant, | slight, | trifling, | trivial. |
DIRECTION.
Synonyms:
| aim, | bearing, | course, | inclination, | tendency, | way. |
The direction of an object is the line of motion or of vision
toward it, or the line in which the object is moving, considered
from our own actual or mental standpoint. Way, literally the road
or path, comes naturally to mean the direction of the road or path;[133]
conversationally, way is almost a perfect synonym of direction;
as, which way did he go? or, in which direction? Bearing is the
direction in which an object is seen with reference to another, and
especially with reference to the points of the compass. Course
is the direction of a moving object; inclination, that toward which
a stationary object leans; tendency, the direction toward which
anything stretches or reaches out; tendency is stronger and more
active than inclination. Compare AIM; CARE; ORDER; OVERSIGHT.
DISCERN.
Synonyms:
| behold, | discriminate, | observe, | recognize, |
| descry, | distinguish, | perceive, | see. |
What we discern we see apart from all other objects; what we
discriminate we judge apart; what we distinguish we mark
apart, or recognize by some special mark or manifest difference.
We discriminate by real differences; we distinguish by outward
signs; an officer is readily distinguished from a common soldier
by his uniform. Objects may be dimly discerned at twilight,
when yet we can not clearly distinguish one from another. We
descry (originally espy) what is difficult to discover. Compare
DISCOVER; LOOK.
DISCOVER.
Synonyms:
| ascertain, | detect, | disclose, | ferret out, | find out, |
| descry, | discern, | expose, | find, | invent. |
Of human actions or character, detect is used, almost without
exception, in a bad sense; discover may be used in either the good
or the bad sense, oftener in the good; he was detected in a fraud;
real merit is sure to be discovered. In scientific language, detect
is used of delicate indications that appear in course of careful
watching; as, a slight fluttering of the pulse could be detected.
We discover what has existed but has not been known to us; we
invent combinations or arrangements not before in use; Columbus
discovered America; Morse invented the electric telegraph. Find
is the most general word for every means of coming to know what
was not before certainly known. A man finds in the road some
stranger's purse, or finds his own which he is searching for. The
expert discovers or detects an error in an account; the auditor
finds the account to be correct. Compare DISCERN.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for HIDE.
[134]
DISEASE.
Synonyms:
| affection, | disorder, | indisposition, | sickness, |
| ailment, | distemper, | infirmity, | unhealthiness, |
| complaint, | illness, | malady, | unsoundness. |
Disease is the general term for any deviation from health; in
a more limited sense it denotes some definite morbid condition;
disorder and affection are rather partial and limited; as, a nervous
affection; a disorder of the digestive system. Sickness was
generally used in English speech and literature, till the close of
the eighteenth century at least, for every form of physical disorder,
as abundantly appears in the English Bible: "Jesus went
about ... healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease
among the people," Matt. iv, 23; "Elisha was fallen sick of
his sickness whereof he died," 2 Kings xiii, 14. There is now, in
England, a tendency to restrict the words sick and sickness to
nausea, or "sickness at the stomach," and to hold ill and illness as
the only proper words to use in a general sense. This distinction
has received but a very limited acceptance in the United States,
where sick and sickness have the earlier and wider usage. We
speak of trifling ailments, a slight indisposition, a serious or a
deadly disease; a slight or severe illness; a painful sickness.
Complaint is a popular term, which may be applied to any degree
of ill health, slight or severe. Infirmity denotes a chronic or
lingering weakness or disability, as blindness or lameness.
Antonyms:
| health, | robustness, | soundness, | strength, | sturdiness, | vigor. |
DISPARAGE.
Synonyms:
| belittle, | depreciate, | discredit, | underestimate, |
| carp at, | derogate from, | dishonor, | underrate, |
| decry, | detract from, | lower, | undervalue. |
To decry is to cry down, in some noisy, public, or conspicuous
manner. A witness or a statement is discredited; the currency is
depreciated; a good name is dishonored by unworthy conduct;
we underestimate in our own minds; we may underrate or undervalue
in statement to others. These words are used, with few exceptions,
of things such as qualities, merits, attainments, etc. To
disparage is to belittle by damaging comparison or suggestion; it
is used only of things. A man's achievements are disparaged, his
motives depreciated, his professions discredited; he himself is
calumniated, slandered, etc. Compare SLANDER.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for PRAISE.
[135]
DISPLACE.
Synonyms:
| confuse, | derange, | disturb, | mislay, | remove, |
| crowd out, | disarrange, | jumble, | misplace, | unsettle. |
Objects are displaced when moved out of the place they have
occupied; they are misplaced when put into a place where they
should not be. One may know where to find what he has misplaced;
what he has mislaid he can not locate.
Antonyms:
| adjust, | assort, | dispose, | order, | put in order, | set in order, |
| array, | classify, | group, | place, | put in place, | sort. |
DO.
Synonyms:
| accomplish, | carry out, | discharge, | perform, |
| achieve, | carry through, | effect, | perpetrate, |
| actualize, | commit, | execute, | realize, |
| bring about, | complete, | finish, | transact, |
| bring to pass, | consummate, | fulfil, | work out. |
Do is the one comprehensive word which includes this whole
class. We may say of the least item of daily work, "It is done,"
and of the grandest human achievement, "Well done!" Finish
and complete signify to bring to an end what was previously begun;
there is frequently the difference in usage that finish is applied to
the fine details and is superficial, while complete is comprehensive,
being applied to the whole ideal, plan, and execution; as, to finish
a statue; to complete a scheme of philosophy. To discharge is to
do what is given in charge, expected, or required; as, to discharge
the duties of the office. To fulfil is to do or to be what has been
promised, expected, hoped, or desired; as, a son fulfils a father's
hopes. Realize, effect, execute, and consummate all signify to embody
in fact what was before in thought. One may realize that
which he has done nothing to bring about; he may realize the
dreams of youth by inheriting a fortune; but he can not effect his
early designs except by doing the utmost that is necessary to make
them fact. Effect includes all that is done to accomplish the intent;
execute refers rather to the final steps; consummate is limited
quite sharply to the concluding act. An officer executes the law
when he proceeds against its violators; a purchase is consummated
when the money is paid and the property delivered. Execute
refers more commonly to the commands of another, effect
and consummate to one's own designs; as, the commander effected
the capture of the fort, because his officers and men promptly executed
his commands. Achieve—to do something worthy of a chief—signifies[136]
always to perform some great and generally some worthy
exploit. Perform and accomplish both imply working toward
the end; but perform always allows a possibility of not attaining,
while accomplish carries the thought of full completion. In Longfellow's
lines, "Patience; accomplish thy labor," etc., perform
could not be substituted without great loss. As between complete
and accomplish, complete considers rather the thing as done; accomplish,
the whole process of doing it. Commit, as applied to
actions, is used only of those that are bad, whether grave or trivial;
perpetrate is used chiefly of aggravated crimes or, somewhat
humorously, of blunders. A man may commit a sin, a trespass, or
a murder; perpetrate an outrage or a felony. We finish a garment
or a letter, complete an edifice or a life-work, consummate a
bargain or a crime, discharge a duty, effect a purpose, execute a
command, fulfil a promise, perform our daily tasks, realize an
ideal, accomplish a design, achieve a victory. Compare TRANSACT;
TRANSACTION.
Antonyms:
| baffle, | defeat, | fail, | mar, | miss, | ruin, |
| come short, | destroy, | frustrate, | miscarry, | neglect, | spoil. |
DOCILE.
Synonyms:
| amenable, | manageable, | pliant, | teachable, |
| compliant, | obedient, | submissive, | tractable, |
| gentle, | pliable, | tame, | yielding. |
One who is docile is easily taught; one who is tractable is
easily led; one who is pliant is easily bent in any direction; compliant
represents one as inclined or persuaded to agreement with
another's will. Compare DUTY.
Antonyms:
| determined, | firm, | intractable, | opinionated, | self-willed, | wilful, |
| dogged, | inflexible, | obstinate, | resolute, | stubborn, | unyielding. |
DOCTRINE.
Synonyms:
| article of belief, | belief, | precept, | teaching, |
| article of faith, | dogma, | principle, | tenet. |
Doctrine primarily signifies that which is taught; principle,
the fundamental basis on which the teaching rests. A doctrine is
reasoned out, and may be defended by reasoning; a dogma rests
on authority, as of direct revelation, the decision of the church,
etc. A doctrine or dogma is a statement of some one item of belief;
a creed is a summary of doctrines or dogmas. Dogma has[137]
commonly, at the present day, an offensive signification, as of a
belief arrogantly asserted. Tenet is simply that which is held,
and is applied to a single item of belief; it is a neutral word,
neither approving nor condemning; we speak of the doctrines of
our own church; of the tenets of others. A precept relates not
to belief, but to conduct. Compare FAITH; LAW.
DOGMATIC.
Synonyms:
| arrogant, | doctrinal, | magisterial, | positive, |
| authoritative, | domineering, | opinionated, | self-opinionated, |
| dictatorial, | imperious, | overbearing, | systematic. |
Dogmatic is technically applied in a good sense to that which
is formally enunciated by adequate authority; doctrinal to that
which is stated in the form of doctrine to be taught or defended.
Dogmatic theology, called also "dogmatics," gives definite propositions,
which it holds to be delivered by authority; systematic
theology considers the same propositions in their logical connection
and order as parts of a system; a doctrinal statement is less
absolute in its claims than a dogmatic treatise, and may be more
partial than the term systematic would imply. Outside of theology,
dogmatic has generally an offensive sense; a dogmatic statement
is one for which the author does not trouble himself to give a
reason, either because of the strength of his convictions, or because
of his contempt for those whom he addresses; thus dogmatic is,
in common use, allied with arrogant and kindred words.
DOUBT, v.
Synonyms:
| distrust, | mistrust, | surmise, | suspect. |
To doubt is to lack conviction. Incompleteness of evidence
may compel one to doubt, or some perverse bias of mind may incline
him to. Distrust may express simply a lack of confidence;
as, I distrust my own judgment; or it may be nearly equivalent
to suspect; as, I distrusted that man from the start. Mistrust
and suspect imply that one is almost assured of positive evil; one
may distrust himself or others; he suspects others. Mistrust is
now rarely, if ever, used of persons, but only of motives, intentions,
etc. Distrust is always serious; mistrust is often used
playfully. Compare SUPPOSE. Compare synonyms for DOUBT, n.
Antonyms:
| believe, | confide in, | depend on, | depend upon, | rely on, | rely upon, | trust. |
[138]
DOUBT, n.
Synonyms:
| disbelief, | incredulity, | perplexity, | suspense, |
| distrust, | indecision, | question, | suspicion, |
| hesitancy, | irresolution, | scruple, | unbelief, |
| hesitation, | misgiving, | skepticism, | uncertainty. |
Doubt is a lack of conviction that may refer either to matters
of belief or to matters of practise. As regards belief, while
doubt is lack of conviction, disbelief is conviction, to the contrary;
unbelief refers to a settled state of mind, generally accompanied
with opposition of heart. Perplexity is active and painful; doubt
may be quiescent. Perplexity presses toward a solution; doubt
may be content to linger unresolved. Any improbable statement
awakens incredulity. In theological usage unbelief and skepticism
have a condemnatory force, as implying wilful rejection of
manifest truth. As regards practical matters, uncertainty applies
to the unknown or undecided; doubt implies some negative
evidence. Suspense regards the future, and is eager and anxious;
uncertainty may relate to any period, and be quite indifferent.
Misgiving is ordinarily in regard to the outcome of something
already done or decided; hesitation, indecision, and irresolution
have reference to something that remains to be decided or done,
and are due oftener to infirmity of will than to lack of knowledge.
Distrust and suspicion apply especially to the motives, character,
etc., of others, and are more decidedly adverse than doubt.
Scruple relates to matters of conscience and duty.
Antonyms:
| assurance, | certainty, | conviction, | determination, | resolution, |
| belief, | confidence, | decision, | persuasion, | resolve. |
DRAW.
Synonyms:
| allure, | drag, | haul, | induce, | lure, | tow, |
| attract, | entice, | incline, | lead, | pull, | tug. |
One object draws another when it moves it toward itself or in
the direction of its own motion by the exertion of adequate force,
whether slight or powerful. To attract is to exert a force that
tends to draw, tho it may produce no actual motion; all objects
are attracted toward the earth, tho they may be sustained
from falling. To drag is to draw against strong resistance; as,
to drag a sled over bare ground, or a carriage up a steep hill. To
pull is to exert a drawing force, whether adequate or inadequate;[139]
as, the fish pulls on the line; a dentist pulls a tooth. To tug is to
draw, or try to draw, a resisting object with a continuous straining
motion; as, to tug at the oar. To haul is to draw somewhat
slowly a heavy object; as, to haul a seine; to haul logs. One
vessel tows another. In the figurative sense, attract is more
nearly akin to incline, draw to induce. We are attracted by one's
appearance, drawn to his side. Compare ALLURE; ARRAY; INFLUENCE.
Antonyms:
| alienate, | estrange, | rebuff, | reject, | repel, | repulse. |
See synonyms for DRIVE.
Prepositions:
To draw water from or out of the well; draw the boat through
the water, to the shore; draw air into the lungs; draw with
cords of love; the wagon is drawn by horses, along the road,
across the field, over the stones, through the woods, to the barn.
DREAM.
Synonyms:
| day-dream, | fantasy, | reverie, | trance, |
| fancy, | hallucination, | romance, | vision. |
A dream is strictly a train of thoughts, fantasies, and images
passing through the mind during sleep; a vision may occur when
one is awake, and in clear exercise of the senses and mental powers;
vision is often applied to something seen by the mind through
supernatural agency, whether in sleep or wakefulness, conceived
as more real and authoritative than a dream; a trance is an abnormal
state, which is different from normal sleep or wakefulness.
A reverie is a purposeless drifting of the mind when awake,
under the influence of mental images; a day-dream that which
passes before the mind in such condition. A fancy is some image
presented to the mind, often in the fullest exercise of its powers.
Hallucination is the seeming perception of non-existent objects,
as in insanity or delirium. In the figurative sense, we speak of
dreams of fortune, visions of glory, with little difference of meaning
except that the vision is thought of as fuller and more vivid.
We speak of a trance of delight when the emotion almost sweeps
one away from the normal exercise of the faculties.
Antonyms:
| certainty, | fact, | reality, | realization, | substance, | verity. |
[140]
DRESS.
Synonyms:
| apparel, | clothes, | garb, | habit, | uniform, |
| array, | clothing, | garments, | raiment, | vestments, |
| attire, | costume, | habiliments, | robes, | vesture. |
Clothing denotes the entire covering of the body, taken as a
whole; clothes and garments view it as composed of separate
parts. Clothes, clothing, and garments may be used of inner or
outer covering; all the other words in the list (with possible rare
exceptions in the case of raiment) refer to the outer garments.
Array, raiment, and vesture are archaic or poetic; so, too, is
habit, except in technical use to denote a lady's riding-dress. The
word vestments is now rare, except in ecclesiastical use. Apparel
and attire are most frequently used of somewhat complete and
elegant outer clothing, tho Shakespeare speaks of "poor and
mean attire." Dress may be used, specifically, for a woman's
gown, and in that sense may be either rich or shabby; but in the
general sense it denotes outer clothing which is meant to be
elegant, complete, and appropriate to some social or public occasion;
as, full dress, court dress, evening dress, etc. Dress has
now largely displaced apparel and attire. Garb denotes the
clothing characteristic of some class, profession, or the like; as,
the garb of a priest. Costume is chiefly used for that which befits
an assumed character; as, a theatrical costume; we sometimes
speak of a national costume, etc.
Antonyms:
| bareness, | disarray, | dishabille, | exposure, | nakedness, | nudity, | undress. |
DRIVE.
Synonyms:
| compel, | propel, | repel, | resist, | thrust, |
| impel, | push, | repulse, | ride, | urge on. |
To drive is to move an object with some force or violence before
or away from oneself; it is the direct reverse of draw, lead,
etc. A man leads a horse by the halter, drives him with whip
and rein. One may be driven to a thing or from it; hence, drive
is a synonym equally for compel or for repel or repulse. Repulse
is stronger and more conclusive than repel; one may be repelled
by the very aspect of the person whose favor he seeks, but is not
repulsed except by the direct refusal or ignoring of his suit. A
certain conventional modern usage, especially in England, requires
us to say that we drive in a carriage, ride upon a horse;
tho in Scripture we read of riding in a chariot (2 Kings ix, 16;
Jer. xvii, 25, etc.); good examples of the same usage may be[141]
found abundantly in the older English. The propriety of a person's
saying that he is going to drive when he is simply to be conveyed
in a carriage, where some one else, as the coachman, does
all the driving, is exceedingly questionable. Many good authorities
prefer to use ride in the older and broader sense as signifying
to be supported and borne along by any means of conveyance.
Compare BANISH; COMPEL; INFLUENCE.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for DRAW.
Prepositions:
Drive to market; to despair; drive into exile; from one's
presence; out of the city; drive by, with, or under the lash; drive
by or past beautiful estates; along the beach; beside the river;
through the park; across the field; around the square; to the
door; into the barn; out of the sunshine.
DUPLICATE.
Synonyms:
| copy, | facsimile, | likeness, | reproduction, |
| counterpart, | imitation, | replica, | transcript. |
A copy is as nearly like the original as the copyist has power
to make it; a duplicate is exactly like the original; a carbon copy
of a typewritten document must be a duplicate; we may have an
inaccurate copy, but never an inaccurate duplicate. A facsimile
is like the original in appearance; a duplicate is the same as the
original in substance and effect; a facsimile of the Declaration of
Independence is not a duplicate. A facsimile of a key might be
quite useless; a duplicate will open the lock. A counterpart exactly
corresponds to another object, but perhaps without design,
while a copy is intentional. An imitation is always thought of as
inferior to the original; as, an imitation of Milton. A replica is
a copy of a work of art by the maker of the original. In law, a
copy of an instrument has in itself no authority; the signatures,
as well as other matters, may be copied; a duplicate is really an
original, containing the same provisions and signed by the same
persons, so that it may have in all respects the same force and effect;
a transcript is an official copy, authenticated by the signature
of the proper officer, and by the seal of the appropriate court.
While strictly there could be but one duplicate, the word is now
extended to an indefinite number of exact copies. Reproduction
is chiefly applied to living organisms.
Antonyms:
| archetype, | model, | original, | pattern, | prototype. |
[142]
DUTY.
Synonyms:
| accountability, | function, | office, | right, |
| business, | obligation, | responsibility, | righteousness. |
Etymologically, duty is that which is owed or due; obligation,
that to or by which one is bound; right, that which is correct,
straight, or in the direct line of truth and goodness; responsibility,
that for which one must answer. Duty and responsibility
are thought of as to some person or persons; right is impersonal.
One's duty may be to others or to himself; his obligations and
responsibilities are to others. Duty arises from the nature of
things; obligation and responsibility may be created by circumstances,
as by one's own promise, or by the acceptance of a trust,
etc. We speak of a parent's duty, a debtor's obligation; or of a
child's duty of obedience, and a parent's responsibility for the
child's welfare. Right is that which accords with the moral system
of the universe. Righteousness is right incarnated in action.
In a more limited sense, right may be used of what one may
rightly claim, and so be the converse of duty. It is the creditor's
right to demand payment, and the debtor's duty to pay. Compare
BUSINESS.
EAGER.
Synonyms:
| animated, | desirous, | glowing, | importunate, | longing, |
| anxious, | earnest, | hot, | intense, | vehement, |
| ardent, | enthusiastic, | impatient, | intent, | yearning, |
| burning, | fervent, | impetuous, | keen, | zealous. |
One is eager who impatiently desires to accomplish some end;
one is earnest with a desire that is less impatient, but more deep,
resolute, and constant; one is anxious with a desire that foresees
rather the pain of disappointment than the delight of attainment.
One is eager for the gratification of any appetite or passion; he is
earnest in conviction, purpose, or character. Eager usually refers
to some specific and immediate satisfaction, earnest to something
permanent and enduring; the patriotic soldier is earnest in his
devotion to his country, eager for a decisive battle.
Antonyms:
| apathetic, | cool, | indifferent, | regardless, | unconcerned, |
| calm, | dispassionate, | negligent, | stolid, | uninterested, |
| careless, | frigid, | phlegmatic, | stony, | unmindful, |
| cold, | heedless, | purposeless, | stupid, | unmoved. |
Prepositions:
Eager for (more rarely after) favor, honor, etc.; eager in
pursuit.
[143]
EASE.
Synonyms:
| easiness, | expertness, | facility, | knack, | readiness. |
Ease in the sense here considered denotes freedom from conscious
or apparent effort, tax, or strain. Ease may be either of
condition or of action; facility is always of action; readiness is of
action or of expected action. One lives at ease who has no pressing
cares; one stands at ease, moves or speaks with ease, when
wholly without constraint. Facility is always active; readiness
may be active or passive; the speaker has facility of expression,
readiness of wit; any appliance is in readiness for use. Ease of
action may imply merely the possession of ample power; facility
always implies practise and skill; any one can press down the
keys of a typewriter with ease; only the skilled operator works
the machine with facility. Readiness in the active sense includes
much of the meaning of ease with the added idea of promptness
or alertness. Easiness applies to the thing done, rather than to
the doer. Expertness applies to the more mechanical processes of
body and mind; we speak of the readiness of an orator, but of
the expertness of a gymnast. Compare COMFORTABLE; DEXTERITY;
POWER.
Antonyms:
| annoyance, | constraint, | discomfort, | irritation, | trouble, | vexation, |
| awkwardness, | difficulty, | disquiet, | perplexity, | uneasiness, | worry. |
EDUCATION.
Synonyms:
| breeding, | discipline, | learning, | study, |
| cultivation, | information, | nurture, | teaching, |
| culture, | instruction, | reading, | training, |
| development, | knowledge, | schooling, | tuition. |
Education (L. educere, to lead or draw out) is the systematic
development and cultivation of the mind and other natural powers.
"Education is the harmonious development of all our faculties.
It begins in the nursery, and goes on at school, but does
not end there. It continues through life, whether we will or not....
'Every person,' says Gibbon, 'has two educations, one
which he receives from others, and one more important, which he
gives himself.'" John Lubbock The Use of Life ch. vii, p. 111.
[Macm. '94.] Instruction, the impartation of knowledge by
others (L. instruere, to build in or into) is but a part of education,
often the smallest part. Teaching is the more familiar and less
formal word for instruction. Training refers not merely to the[144]
impartation of knowledge, but to the exercising of one in actions
with the design to form habits. Discipline is systematic and rigorous
training, with the idea of subjection to authority and perhaps
of punishment. Tuition is the technical term for teaching
as the business of an instructor or as in the routine of a school;
tuition is narrower than teaching, not, like the latter word, including
training. Study is emphatically what one does for himself.
We speak of the teaching, training, or discipline, but not
of the education or tuition of a dog or a horse. Breeding and
nurture include teaching and training, especially as directed by
and dependent upon home life and personal association; breeding
having reference largely to manners with such qualities as are
deemed distinctively characteristic of high birth; nurture (literally
nourishing) having more direct reference to moral qualities,
not overlooking the physical and mental. Knowledge and learning
tell nothing of mental development apart from the capacity
to acquire and remember, and nothing whatever of that moral
development which is included in education in its fullest and
noblest sense; learning, too, may be acquired by one's unaided
industry, but any full education must be the result in great part
of instruction, training, and personal association. Study is
emphatically what one does for himself, and in which instruction
and tuition can only point the way, encourage the student to
advance, and remove obstacles; vigorous, persevering study is
one of the best elements of training. Study is also used in the
sense of the thing studied, a subject to be mastered by study, a
studious pursuit. Compare KNOWLEDGE; REFINEMENT; WISDOM.
Antonyms:
Compare synonyms for IGNORANT.