Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget
897. soul, heart, breast, bosom, inner man; heart's core, heart's
2498 words | Chapter 160
strings, heart's blood; heart of hearts, bottom of one's heart,
penetralia mentis[Lat]; secret and inmost recesses of the heart,
cockles of one's heart; inmost heart, inmost soul; backbone. passion,
pervading spirit; ruling passion, master passion; furore[obs3];
fullness of the heart, heyday of the blood, flesh and blood, flow of
soul. energy, fervor, fire, force. V. have affections, possess
affections &c. n.; be of a character &c. n.; be affected &c. adj.;
breathe. Adj. affected, characterized, formed, molded, cast;
attempered[obs3], tempered; framed; predisposed; prone, inclined;
having a bias &c. n.; tinctured with, imbued with, penetrated with,
eaten up with. inborn, inbred, ingrained; deep-rooted, ineffaceable,
inveterate; pathoscopic|!; congenital, dyed in the wool, implanted by
nature, inherent, in the grain. affective [obs3][med. and general].
Adv. in one's heart &c. n.; at heart; heart and soul &c. 821. Phr.
"affection is a coal that must be cool'd else suffer'd it will set the
heart on fire" [Venus and Adonis].
#821. Feeling.—N. feeling; suffering &c. v.; endurance, tolerance,
sufferance, supportance[obs3], experience, response; sympathy &c.
(love) 897; impression, inspiration, affection, sensation, emotion,
pathos, deep sense. warmth, glow, unction, gusto, vehemence; fervor,
fervency; heartiness, cordiality; earnestness, eagerness;
empressement[Fr], gush, ardor, zeal, passion, enthusiasm, verve,
furore[obs3], fanaticism; excitation of feeling &c. 824; fullness of
the heart &c. (disposition) 820; passion &c. (state of excitability)
825; ecstasy &c. (pleasure) 827. blush, suffusion, flush; hectic;
tingling, thrill, turn, shock; agitation &c. (irregular motion) 315;
quiver, heaving, flutter, flurry, fluster, twitter, tremor; throb,
throbbing; pulsation, palpitation, panting; trepidation, perturbation;
ruffle, hurry of spirits, pother, stew, ferment; state of excitement.
V. feel; receive an impression &c. n.; be impressed with &c. adj.;
entertain feeling, harbor feeling, cherish feeling &c. n. respond;
catch the flame, catch the infection; enter the spirit of. bear,
suffer, support, sustain, endure, thole [obs3][Scottish], aby[obs3];
abide &c. (be composed) 826; experience &c. (meet with) 151; taste,
prove; labor under, smart under; bear the brunt of, brave, stand.
swell, glow, warm, flush, blush, change color, mantle; turn color, turn
pale, turn red, turn black in the face; tingle, thrill, heave, pant,
throb, palpitate, go pitapat, tremble, quiver, flutter, twitter; shake
&c. 315; be agitated, be excited &c. 824; look blue, look black; wince;
draw a deep breath. impress &c. (excite the feelings) 824. Adj. feeling
&c. v.; sentient; sensuous; sensorial, sensory; emotive, emotional; of
feeling, with feeling &c. n. warm, quick, lively, smart, strong, sharp,
acute, cutting, piercing, incisive; keen, keen as a razor; trenchant,
pungent, racy, piquant, poignant, caustic. impressive, deep, profound,
indelible; deep felt, home felt, heartfelt; swelling, soul-stirring,
deep-mouthed, heart-expanding, electric, thrilling, rapturous,
ecstatic. earnest, wistful, eager, breathless; fervent; fervid;
gushing, passionate, warm-hearted, hearty, cordial, sincere, zealous,
enthusiastic, glowing, ardent, burning, red-hot, fiery, flaming;
boiling over. pervading, penetrating, absorbing; rabid, raving,
feverish, fanatical, hysterical; impetuous &c. (excitable) 825.
impressed with, moved with, touched with, affected with, penetrated
with, seized with, imbued with &c. 82; devoured by; wrought up &c.
(excited) 824; struck all of a heap; rapt; in a quiver &c. n.;
enraptured &c. 829. Adv. heart and soul, from the bottom of one's
heart, ab imo pectore[Lat], at heart, con amore[It], heartily,
devoutly, over head and ears, head over heels. Phr. the heart big, the
heart full, the heart swelling, the heart beating, the heart pulsating,
the heart throbbing, the heart thumping, the heart beating high, the
heart melting, the heart overflowing, the heart bursting, the heart
breaking; the heart goes out, a heart as big as all outdoors (sympathy)
897.
#822. Sensibility.—N. sensibility, sensibleness, sensitiveness;
moral sensibility; impressibility, affectibility[obs3];
susceptibleness, susceptibility, susceptivity[obs3]; mobility;
vivacity, vivaciousness; tenderness, softness; sentimental,
sentimentality; sentimentalism. excitability &c. 825; fastidiousness
&c. 868; physical sensibility &c. 375. sore point, sore place; where
the shoe pinches. V. be sensible &c. adj.; have a tender heart, have a
warm heart, have a sensitive heart. take to heart, treasure up in the
heart; shrink. "die of a rose in aromatic pain" [Pope]; touch to the
quick; touch on the raw, touch a raw nerve. Adj. sensible, sensitive;
impressible, impressionable; susceptive, susceptible; alive to,
impassionable[obs3], gushing; warm hearted, tender hearted, soft
hearted; tender as a chicken; soft, sentimental, romantic;
enthusiastic, highflying[obs3], spirited, mettlesome, vivacious,
lively, expressive, mobile, tremblingly alive; excitable &c. 825;
oversensitive, without skin, thin-skinned; fastidious &c. 868. Adv.
sensibly &c. adj; to the quick, to the inmost core. Phr. mens aequa in
arduis[Lat]; pour salt in the wound.
#823. Insensibility.—N. insensibility, insensibleness[obs3]; moral
insensibility; inertness, inertia; vis inertiae[Lat]; impassibility,
impassibleness; inappetency[obs3], apathy, phlegm, dullness,
hebetude[obs3], supineness, lukewarmness[obs3]. cold fit, cold blood,
cold heart; coldness, coolness; frigidity, sang froid[Fr]; stoicism,
imperturbation &c. (inexcitability) 826[obs3]; nonchalance, unconcern,
dry eyes; insouciance &c. (indifference) 866; recklessness &c. 863;
callousness; heart of stone, stock and stone, marble, deadness. torpor,
torpidity; obstupefaction|, lethargy, coma, trance, vegetative state;
sleep &c. 683; suspended animation; stupor, stupefaction; paralysis,
palsy; numbness &c. (physical insensibility) 376. neutrality;
quietism, vegetation. V. be insensible &c. adj.; have a rhinoceros
hide; show insensibility &c. n.; not mind, not care, not be affected
by; have no desire for &c. 866; have no interest in, feel no interest
in, take no interest in; nil admirari[Lat]; not care a straw &c.
(unimportance) 643 for; disregard &c. (neglect) 460; set at naught &c.
(make light of) 483; turn a deaf ear to &c. (inattention) 458;
vegetate. render insensible, render callous; blunt, obtund[obs3], numb,
benumb, paralyze, deaden, hebetate[obs3], stun, stupefy; brutify[obs3];
brutalize; chloroform, anaesthetize[obs3], put under; assify[obs3].
inure; harden the heart; steel, caseharden, sear. Adj. insensible,
unconscious; impassive, impassible; blind to, deaf to, dead to;
unsusceptible, insusceptible; unimpressionable[obs3],
unimpressible[obs3]; passionless, spiritless, heartless, soulless;
unfeeling, unmoral. apathetic; leuco-|, phlegmatic; dull, frigid; cold
blooded, cold hearted; cold as charity; flat, maudlin, obtuse, inert,
supine, sluggish, torpid, torpedinous[obs3], torporific[obs3]; sleepy
&c. (inactive) 683; languid, half-hearted, tame; numbed; comatose;
anaesthetic &c. 376; stupefied, chloroformed, drugged, stoned;
palsy-stricken. indifferent, lukewarm; careless, mindless, regardless;
inattentive &c. 458; neglectful &c. 460; disregarding. unconcerned,
nonchalant, pococurante[obs3], insouciant, sans souci[Fr]; unambitious
&c. 866. unaffected, unruffled, unimpressed, uninspired, unexcited,
unmoved, unstirred, untouched, unshocked[obs3], unstruck[obs3];
unblushing &c. (shameless) 885; unanimated; vegetative. callous,
thick-skinned, hard-nosed, pachydermatous, impervious; hardened;
inured, casehardened; steeled against, proof against; imperturbable &c.
(inexcitable) 826[obs3]; unfelt. Adv. insensibly &c. adj.; aequo
animo[Lat]; without being moved, without being touched, without being
impressed; in cold blood; with dry eyes, with withers unwrung[obs3].
Phr. never mind; macht nichts [German], it is of no consequence &c.
(unimportant) 643; it cannot be helped; nothing coming amiss; it is all
the same to, it is all one to.
#824. Excitation.—N. excitation of feeling; mental excitement;
suscitation[obs3], galvanism, stimulation, piquance, piquancy,
provocation, inspiration, calling forth, infection; animation,
agitation, perturbation; subjugation, fascination, intoxication;
enravishment[obs3]; entrancement; pressure, tension, high pressure.
unction, impressiveness &c. adj. trail of temper, casus belli[Lat];
irritation &c. (anger) 900; passion &c. (state of excitability) 825;
thrill &c. (feeling) 821; repression of feeling &c. 826;
sensationalism, yellow journalism. V. excite, affect, touch, move,
impress, strike, interest, animate, inspire, impassion, smite, infect;
stir the blood, fire the blood, warm the blood; set astir; wake, awake,
awaken; call forth; evoke, provoke; raise up, summon up, call up, wake
up, blow up, get up, light up; raise; get up the steam, rouse, arouse,
stir; fire, kindle, enkindle, apply the torch, set on fire, inflame.
stimulate; exsuscitate|; inspirit; spirit up, stir up, work up, pique;
infuse life into, give new life to; bring new blood, introduce new
blood; quicken; sharpen, whet; work upon &c. (incite) 615; hurry on,
give a fillip, put on one's mettle. fan the fire, fan the flame; blow
the coals, stir the embers; fan into a flame; foster, heat, warm,
foment, raise to a fever heat; keep up, keep the pot boiling; revive,
rekindle; rake up, rip up. stir the feelings, play on the feelings,
come home to the feelings; touch a string, touch a chord, touch the
soul, touch the heart; go to one's heart, penetrate, pierce, go through
one, touch to the quick; possess the soul, pervade the soul, penetrate
the soul, imbrue the soul, absorb the soul, affect the soul, disturb
the soul. absorb, rivet the attention; sink into the mind, sink into
the heart; prey on the mind, distract; intoxicate; overwhelm,
overpower; bouleverser[Fr], upset, turn one's head. fascinate;
enrapture &c. (give pleasure) 829. agitate, perturb, ruffle, fluster,
shake, disturb, startle, shock, stagger; give one a shock, give one a
turn; strike all of a heap; stun, astound, electrify, galvanize,
petrify. irritate, sting; cut to the heart, cut to the quick; try one's
temper; fool to the top of one's bent, pique; infuriate, madden, make
one's blood boil; lash into fury &c. (wrath) 900. be excited &c. adj.;
flush up, flare up; catch the infection; thrill &c. (feel) 821; mantle;
work oneself up; seethe, boil, simmer, foam, fume, flame, rage, rave;
run mad &c. (passion) 825. Adj. excited &c. v.; wrought up, up the qui
vive[Fr], astir, sparkling; in a quiver &c. 821, in a fever, in a
ferment, in a blaze, in a state of excitement; in hysterics; black in
the face, overwrought, tense, taught, on a razor's edge; hot, red-hot,
flushed, feverish; all of a twitter, in a pucker; with quivering lips,
with tears in one's eyes. flaming; boiling over; ebullient, seething;
foaming at the mouth; fuming, raging, carried away by passion, wild,
raving, frantic, mad, distracted, beside oneself, out of one's wits,
ready to burst, bouleverse[obs3], demoniacal. lost, eperdu[Fr],
tempest-tossed; haggard; ready to sink. stung to the quick, up, on
one's high ropes. exciting, absorbing, riveting, distracting &c. v.;
impressive, warm, glowing, fervid, swelling, imposing, spirit-stirring,
thrilling; high- wrought; soul-stirring, soul-subduing; heart-stirring,
heart-swelling, heart-thrilling; agonizing &c. (painful) 830; telling,
sensational, hysterical; overpowering, overwhelming; more than flesh
and blood can bear; yellow. piquant &c. (pungent) 392; spicy,
appetizing, provocative, provoquant[obs3], tantalizing. eager to go,
anxious to go, chafing at the bit. Adv. till one is black in the face.
Phr. the heart beating high, the heart going pitapat, the heart leaping
into one's mouth; the blood being up, the blood boiling in one's veins;
the eye glistening - "in a fine frenzy rolling"; the head turned; "when
the going gets tough, the tough get going" [Richard Nixon].
#825. [Excess of sensitiveness] Excitability—N. excitability,
impetuosity, vehemence; boisterousness &c. adj.; turbulence;
impatience, intolerance, nonendurance[obs3]; irritability &c.
(irascibility) 901; itching &c. (desire) 865; wincing; disquiet,
disquietude; restlessness; fidgets, fidgetiness; agitation &c.
(irregular motion) 315. trepidation, perturbation, ruffle, hurry, fuss,
flurry; fluster, flutter; pother, stew, ferment; whirl; buck fever;
hurry-skurry[obs3], thrill &c. (feeling) 821; state of excitement,
fever of excitement; transport. passion, excitement, flush, heat;
fever, heat; fire, flame, fume, blood boiling; tumult; effervescence,
ebullition; boiling over; whiff, gust, story, tempest; scene, breaking
out, burst, fit, paroxysm, explosion; outbreak, outburst; agony.
violence &c. 173; fierceness &c. adj.; rage, fury, furor, furore[obs3],
desperation, madness, distraction, raving, delirium; phrensy[obs3],
frenzy, hysterics; intoxication; tearing passion, raging passion; anger
&c. 900. fascination, infatuation, fanaticism; Quixotism, Quixotry;
tete montee[Fr]. V. be impatient &c. adj.; not be able to bear &c. 826;
bear ill, wince, chafe, champ a bit; be in a stew &c. n.; be out of all
patience, fidget, fuss, not have a wink of sleep; toss on one's pillow.
lose one's temper &c. 900; break out, burst out, fly out; go off, fly
off, fly off at a tangent, fly off the handle, lose one's cool [coll.];
explode, flare up, flame up, fire up, burst into a flame, take fire,
fire, burn; boil, boil over; foam, fume, rage, rave, rant, tear; go
wild, run wild, run mad, go into hysterics; run riot, run amuck; battre
la campagne[Fr], faire le diable a quatre[Fr], play the deuce. Adj.
excitable, easily excited, in an excitable state; high-strung;
irritable &c. (irascible) 901; impatient, intolerant. feverish,
febrile, hysterical; delirious, mad, moody, maggoty-headed. unquiet,
mercurial, electric, galvanic, hasty, hurried, restless, fidgety,
fussy; chafing &c. v. startlish[obs3], mettlesome, high-mettled[obs3],
skittish. vehement, demonstrative, violent, wild, furious, fierce,
fiery, hot- headed, madcap. overzealous, enthusiastic, impassioned,
fanatical; rabid &c. (eager) 865. rampant, clamorous, uproarious,
turbulent, tempestuous, tumultuary[obs3], boisterous. impulsive,
impetuous, passionate; uncontrolled, uncontrollable; ungovernable,
irrepressible, stanchless[obs3], inextinguishable, burning, simmering,
volcanic, ready to burst forth, volatile. excited, exciting &c. 824.
Int. pish! pshaw! Phr. noli me tangere[Lat]; "filled with fury, rapt,
inspir'd" [Collins]; maggiore fretta minore atto[It].
#826. [Absence of excitability, or of excitement.] Inexcitability.—
N. inexcitability[obs3], imperturbability, inirritability[obs3]; even
temper, tranquil mind, dispassion; tolerance, patience, coolth [coll.].
passiveness &c. (physical inertness) 172; hebetude[obs3],
hebetation[obs3]; impassibility &c. (insensibility) 823; stupefaction.
coolness, calmness &c. adj.; composure, placidity, indisturbance[obs3],
imperturbation[obs3], sang froid[Fr], tranquility, serenity; quiet,
quietude; peace of mind, mental calmness. staidness &c. adj.; gravity,
sobriety, Quakerism[obs3]; philosophy, equanimity, stoicism, command of
temper; self-possession, self-control, self-command, self-restraint,
ice water in one's veins; presence of mind. submission &c. 725;
resignation; sufferance, supportance[obs3], endurance,
longsufferance[obs3], forbearance; longanimity[obs3]; fortitude;
patience of Job, patience "on a monument" [Twelfth Night], patience
"sovereign o'er transmuted ill" [Johnson]; moderation; repression of
feelings, subjugation of feeling; restraint &c. 751. tranquillization
&c. (moderation) 174[obs3]. V. be composed &c. adj. laisser faire[Fr],
laisser aller[Fr]; take things easily, take things as they come; take
it easy, rub on, live and let live; take easily, take cooly[obs3], take
in good part; aequam servare mentem [Latin]. bear the brunt, bear well;
go through, support, endure, brave, disregard. tolerate, suffer, stand,
bide; abide, aby[obs3]; bear with, put up with, take up with, abide
with; acquiesce; submit &c. (yield) 725; submit with a good grace;
resign oneself to, reconcile oneself to; brook, digest, eat, swallow,
pocket, stomach. make light of, make the best of, make "a virtue of
necessity" [Chaucer]; put a good face on, keep one's countenance; check
&c. 751 check oneself. compose, appease &c. (moderate)174; propitiate;
repress &c. (restrain) 751; render insensible &c. 823; overcome one's
excitability, allay one's excitability, repress one's excitability &c.
825; master one's feelings. make oneself easy; make one's mind easy;
set one's mind at ease, set one's mind at rest. calm down, cool down;
gentle; thaw, grow cool. be borne, be endured; go down. Adj.
inexcitable[obs3], unexcitable; imperturbable; unsusceptible &c.
(insensible) 823; unpassionate[obs3], dispassionate; cold-blooded,
irritable; enduring &c. v.; stoical, Platonic, philosophic, staid,
stayed; sober, sober minded; grave; sober as a judge, grave as a judge;
sedate, demure, cool-headed. easy-going, peaceful, placid, calm; quiet
as a mouse; tranquil, serene; cool as a cucumber, cool as a custard;
undemonstrative. temperate &c. (moderate) 174; composed, collected;
unexcited, unstirred, unruffled, undisturbed, unperturbed,
unimpassioned; unoffended[obs3]; unresisting. meek, tolerant; patient,
patient as Job; submissive &c. 725; tame; content, resigned, chastened,
subdued, lamblike[obs3]; gentle as a lamb; suaviter in modo[Lat]; mild
as mothers milk; soft as peppermint; armed with patience, bearing with,
clement, long-suffering. Adv. "like patience on a monument smiling at
grief" [Twelfth Night]; aequo animo[Lat], in cold blood &c. 823; more
in sorrow than in anger. Int. patience! and shuffle the cards. Phr.
"cool calm and collected", keep calm in the midst of a storm;
"adversity's sweet milk, philosophy" [Romeo and Juliet]; mens aequa in
arduis philosophia stemma non inspecite [Lat][Seneca]; quo me cumque
rapit tempestas deferor hospes [Lat][Horace]; "they also serve who only
stand and wait" [Milton].
SECTION II. PERSONAL AFFECTIONS[1]
[1] Or those which concern one's own state of feeling.
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