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it's+all+in+the+mind

  • 1 Mind

       It becomes, therefore, no inconsiderable part of science... to know the different operations of the mind, to separate them from each other, to class them under their proper heads, and to correct all that seeming disorder in which they lie involved when made the object of reflection and inquiry.... It cannot be doubted that the mind is endowed with several powers and faculties, that these powers are distinct from one another, and that what is really distinct to the immediate perception may be distinguished by reflection and, consequently, that there is a truth and falsehood which lie not beyond the compass of human understanding. (Hume, 1955, p. 22)
       Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white Paper, void of all Characters, without any Ideas: How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store, which the busy and boundless Fancy of Man has painted on it, with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials of Reason and Knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from Experience. (Locke, quoted in Herrnstein & Boring, 1965, p. 584)
       The kind of logic in mythical thought is as rigorous as that of modern science, and... the difference lies, not in the quality of the intellectual process, but in the nature of things to which it is applied.... Man has always been thinking equally well; the improvement lies, not in an alleged progress of man's mind, but in the discovery of new areas to which it may apply its unchanged and unchanging powers. (Leґvi-Strauss, 1963, p. 230)
       MIND. A mysterious form of matter secreted by the brain. Its chief activity consists in the endeavor to ascertain its own nature, the futility of the attempt being due to the fact that it has nothing but itself to know itself with. (Bierce, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 55)
       [Philosophy] understands the foundations of knowledge and it finds these foundations in a study of man-as-knower, of the "mental processes" or the "activity of representation" which make knowledge possible. To know is to represent accurately what is outside the mind, so to understand the possibility and nature of knowledge is to understand the way in which the mind is able to construct such representation.... We owe the notion of a "theory of knowledge" based on an understanding of "mental processes" to the seventeenth century, and especially to Locke. We owe the notion of "the mind" as a separate entity in which "processes" occur to the same period, and especially to Descartes. We owe the notion of philosophy as a tribunal of pure reason, upholding or denying the claims of the rest of culture, to the eighteenth century and especially to Kant, but this Kantian notion presupposed general assent to Lockean notions of mental processes and Cartesian notions of mental substance. (Rorty, 1979, pp. 3-4)
       Under pressure from the computer, the question of mind in relation to machine is becoming a central cultural preoccupation. It is becoming for us what sex was to Victorians-threat, obsession, taboo, and fascination. (Turkle, 1984, p. 313)
       7) Understanding the Mind Remains as Resistant to Neurological as to Cognitive Analyses
       Recent years have been exciting for researchers in the brain and cognitive sciences. Both fields have flourished, each spurred on by methodological and conceptual developments, and although understanding the mechanisms of mind is an objective shared by many workers in these areas, their theories and approaches to the problem are vastly different....
       Early experimental psychologists, such as Wundt and James, were as interested in and knowledgeable about the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system as about the young science of the mind. However, the experimental study of mental processes was short-lived, being eclipsed by the rise of behaviorism early in this century. It was not until the late 1950s that the signs of a new mentalism first appeared in scattered writings of linguists, philosophers, computer enthusiasts, and psychologists.
       In this new incarnation, the science of mind had a specific mission: to challenge and replace behaviorism. In the meantime, brain science had in many ways become allied with a behaviorist approach.... While behaviorism sought to reduce the mind to statements about bodily action, brain science seeks to explain the mind in terms of physiochemical events occurring in the nervous system. These approaches contrast with contemporary cognitive science, which tries to understand the mind as it is, without any reduction, a view sometimes described as functionalism.
       The cognitive revolution is now in place. Cognition is the subject of contemporary psychology. This was achieved with little or no talk of neurons, action potentials, and neurotransmitters. Similarly, neuroscience has risen to an esteemed position among the biological sciences without much talk of cognitive processes. Do the fields need each other?... [Y]es because the problem of understanding the mind, unlike the wouldbe problem solvers, respects no disciplinary boundaries. It remains as resistant to neurological as to cognitive analyses. (LeDoux & Hirst, 1986, pp. 1-2)
       Since the Second World War scientists from different disciplines have turned to the study of the human mind. Computer scientists have tried to emulate its capacity for visual perception. Linguists have struggled with the puzzle of how children acquire language. Ethologists have sought the innate roots of social behaviour. Neurophysiologists have begun to relate the function of nerve cells to complex perceptual and motor processes. Neurologists and neuropsychologists have used the pattern of competence and incompetence of their brain-damaged patients to elucidate the normal workings of the brain. Anthropologists have examined the conceptual structure of cultural practices to advance hypotheses about the basic principles of the mind. These days one meets engineers who work on speech perception, biologists who investigate the mental representation of spatial relations, and physicists who want to understand consciousness. And, of course, psychologists continue to study perception, memory, thought and action.
    ... [W]orkers in many disciplines have converged on a number of central problems and explanatory ideas. They have realized that no single approach is likely to unravel the workings of the mind: it will not give up its secrets to psychology alone; nor is any other isolated discipline-artificial intelligence, linguistics, anthropology, neurophysiology, philosophy-going to have any greater success. (Johnson-Laird, 1988, p. 7)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind

  • 2 Mind-body Problem

       From this I knew that I was a substance the whole essence or nature of which is to think, and that for its existence there is no need of any place, nor does it depend on any material thing; so that this "me," that is to say, the soul by which I am what I am, is entirely distinct from body, and is even more easy to know than is the latter; and even if body were not, the soul would not cease to be what it is. (Descartes, 1970a, p. 101)
        still remains to be explained how that union and apparent intermingling [of mind and body]... can be found in you, if you are incorporeal, unextended and indivisible.... How, at least, can you be united with the brain, or some minute part in it, which (as has been said) must yet have some magnitude or extension, however small it be? If you are wholly without parts how can you mix or appear to mix with its minute subdivisions? For there is no mixture unless each of the things to be mixed has parts that can mix with one another. (Gassendi, 1970, p. 201)
       here are... certain things which we experience in ourselves and which should be attributed neither to the mind nor body alone, but to the close and intimate union that exists between the body and the mind.... Such are the appetites of hunger, thirst, etc., and also the emotions or passions of the mind which do not subsist in mind or thought alone... and finally all the sensations. (Descartes, 1970b, p. 238)
       With any other sort of mind, absolute Intelligence, Mind unattached to a particular body, or Mind not subject to the course of time, the psychologist as such has nothing to do. (James, 1890, p. 183)
       [The] intention is to furnish a psychology that shall be a natural science: that is to represent psychical processes as quantitatively determinate states of specifiable material particles, thus making these processes perspicuous and free from contradiction. (Freud, 1966, p. 295)
       The thesis is that the mental is nomologically irreducible: there may be true general statements relating the mental and the physical, statements that have the logical form of a law; but they are not lawlike (in a strong sense to be described). If by absurdly remote chance we were to stumble on a non-stochastic true psychophysical generalization, we would have no reason to believe it more than roughly true. (Davidson, 1970, p. 90)
       We can divide those who uphold the doctrine that men are machines, or a similar doctrine, into two categories: those who deny the existence of mental events, or personal experiences, or of consciousness;... and those who admit the existence of mental events, but assert that they are "epiphenomena"-that everything can be explained without them, since the material world is causally closed. (Popper & Eccles, 1977, p. 5)
       Mind affects brain and brain affects mind. That is the message, and by accepting it you commit yourself to a special view of the world. It is a view that shows the limits of the genetic imperative on what we turn out to be, both intellectually and emotionally. It decrees that, while the secrets of our genes express themselves with force throughout our lives, the effect of that information on our bodies can be influenced by our psychological history and beliefs about the world. And, just as important, the other side of the same coin argues that what we construct in our minds as objective reality may simply be our interpretations of certain bodily states dictated by our genes and expressed through our physical brains and body. Put differently, various attributes of mind that seem to have a purely psychological origin are frequently a product of the brain's interpreter rationalizing genetically driven body states. Make no mistake about it: this two-sided view of mind-brain interactions, if adopted, has implications for the management of one's personal life. (Gazzaniga, 1988, p. 229)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind-body Problem

  • 3 ALL-

    may be prefixed to almost every adjective and adverb in an intensive sense, very, extremely.
    * * *
    may in old writers be prefixed to almost every adjective and adverb in an intensive sense, like Engl. very, Lat. per-, Gr. οια-, ζα-. In common talk and modern writings it is rare (except after a negative), and denotes something below the average, viz. tolerably, pretty well, not very well; but in the Sagas, something capital, exceeding. In high style it may perhaps be used in the old sense, e. g. allfagrt ljós oss birtist brátt, a transl. of the Ambrosian hymn, Aurora lucis rutilat. The instances in old writers are nearly endless, e. g. all-annt, n. adj. very eager, Fms. ii. 41; ironically, 150. all-apr, adj. very sore, very harsh, v. apr. all-auðsóttligt, n. adj. very easy, Fs. 40. all-auðveldliga, adv. very easily, Fms. iv. 129. all-auðveldligr, adj. very easy, Fms. v. 331. all-auðveldr, adj. id., Fbr. 158: neut. as adv., Hkr. ii. 76. all-ágætr, adj. very famous, Fms. ii. 76. all-áhyggjusamliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very careful, Fms. vi. 184. all-ákafliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very hot, impetuous, Hkr. i. 234, ii. 32. all-ákaft, adj. very fast, Nj. 196. all-áræðiliga, adv. very likely, Fær. 183. all-áræðislítill, adj. very timid, Fms. vi. 217. all-ástúðligt, n. adj. very hearty, intimate, Fms. ii. 20. all-banvænn, adj. very likely to prove mortal, Orkn. 148. all-beinn, adj. very hospitable, Fms. ii. 84, Eb. 286: neut. as adv., Fær. 259. all-beiskr, adj. very harsh, bitter, Sturl. iii. 167. all-bert, n. adj. very manifest, Lex. Poët. all-bitr, adj. very biting, sharp, Sks. 548. all-bitrligr, adj. of a very sharp appearance, Vígl. 20. all-bjartr, adj. very bright, Fms. viii. 361. all-bjúgr, adj. very much bent, curved, Ölkofr. 39. all-blár, adj. very blue, Glúm. 394. all-blíðliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very blithely, kindly, Fær. 132. all-blíðr, adj. very mild, amiable, Sd. 158, Fms. i. 202. all-bráðgörr, adj. very soon mature, Eb. 16. all-bráðliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very hastily, Orkn. 72. all-bráðr, adj. very hot-headed, Njarð. 370: neut. as adv. very soon, Fms. xi. 51: dat. pl. all-bráðum, as adv. very suddenly, 139. all-bros-ligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very funny, laughable, Fms. iii. 113. all-dasigr, adj. very sluggish, Lex. Poët. all-digr, adj. very big, stout; metaph. puffed up, Nj. 236. all-djarfliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very boldly, Fms. ii. 313, Orkn. 102. all-djúpsettr, adj. very deep, thoughtful, Bret. 158. all-drengiliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very bold, gallant, Lv. 110. all-dræmt, n. adj. very boastfully, from dramb, superbia, (the modern word is dræmt = slowly, sluggishly); þeir létu a. yfir sér, boasted, Sturl. ii. 56. MS. Mus. Brit. 1127; Cod. A. M. has allvænt, prob. wrongly. all-dyggr, adj. very doughty, Lex. Poët. all-dýrr, adj. very dear, Fms. iii. 159. all-eiguligr, adj. very worth having, Sd. 146. all-eina (theol.), á Guð alleina (a hymn), alone: Hkr. iii. 339 (in a spurious chapter). all-einarðliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very sincere, candid, open, Ld. 334. all-eldiligr and -elliligr, adj. of a very aged appearance, Fms. iii. 125. all-fagr, adj. very bright, fair, Orkn. 296 old Ed.: neut. as adv. very fairly, Sturl. i. 72. all-fast, n. adj. very firmly, steadfastly, Eb. 290, Fær. 259. all-fastorðr, adj. very ‘wordfast,’ very true to his word, Fms. vii. 120. all-fálátr, adj. very taciturn, close, Fas. iii. 408. all-fáliga, adv. on very cold terms, Sturl. iii. 298. all-fámáligr, adj. very close, of very few words, Fms. iii. 85, iv. 366. all-fámennr, adj. followed by very few people, Sturl. ii. 122, Magn. 386. all-far, adj. very few, Eg. 512, Ld. 272, Ísl. ii. 356: neut. on very cold terms, Fms. xi. 55. all-fáræðinn, adj. of very few words, Fms. iv. 312. all-feginn, adj. very ‘fain,’ glad, Eg. 240, Ld. 330. all-feginsamliga, adv. very ‘fain,’ gladly, Eg. 27. all-feigligr, adj. having the mark of death very plain on one’s face, v. feigr, Sturl. iii. 234. all-feitr, adj. very fat, Fms. x. 303. all-ferliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very rudely, Fms. iv. 263. all-fémikill, adj. very costly, Ld. 298. all-fjarri, adv. very far, far from, metaph., Hkr. ii. 246; eigi a., not improper, Fbr. 15. all-fjartekit, part. very far-fetched, Skálda 166. all-fjölgan, adj. acc. very numerous (does not exist in nom.), Sks. 138 A. all-fjölkunnigr, adj. very deeply versed in sorcery, Fms. ii. 175, Fas. i. 412. all-fjölmeðr and -mennr, adj. followed, attended by very many people, much frequented, Eg. 724, 188, Hkr. i. 215: n. sing. in very great numbers, Fms. i. 36. all-fjölrætt, n. adj. very heedful, much talked of, Nj. 109. all-forsjáll, adj. very prudent, Hom. 115. all-framr, adj. very famous, Lex. Poët.; very far forward, Grett. 161 A. all-frekliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very daringly, impudently, Fas. i. 24. all-frekr, adj. too eager, too daring, Fms. vii. 164. all-friðliga, adv. in very great peace, Lex. Poët. all-fríðr, adj. very beautiful, Eg. 23, Hkr. i. 225, ii. 354, Fms. i. 2. all-frjáls, adj. very free, independent, v. alfrjáls. all-fróðligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very wise, learned, Sks. 306 B. all-fróðr, adj. very learned, Sks. 30. all-frægr, adj. very famous, Fms. ii. 324, Hkr. i. 232, ii. 187, Ld. 122. all-frækiliga, adv. and -ligr, adj., and all-frækn, adj. and -liga, adv. very bold, boldly, Ísl. ii. 267, Hkr. i. 239, Fms. i. 121. all-fúss, adj. and -liga, adv. very eager, eagerly, Eg. 488, Fms. xi. 89. all-fýsiligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very desirable, Eg. 19, 468. all-fölr, adj. very pale, Lex. Poët. all-gagnsamr, adj. very profitable, gainful, Ísl. ii. 56. all-gamall, adj. very old, Hkr. i. 34. all-gegniliga and -gegnliga, adv. very fittingly, Sturl. ii. 63. all-gemsmikill, adj. very wanton, frolicsome, Sturl. ii. 57. all-gerla and -görviligr, v. -görla, -görviligr. all-gestrisinn, adj. very hospitable, Háv. 40. all-geysilegr, adj. and -liga, adv. very impetuous, Fms. x. 81. all-gildliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. with a very grand air, Grett. 121. all-gildr, adj. very grand, Lex. Poët. all-giptusam-liga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very lucky, Fms. x. 53. all-glaðliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very joyfully, joyful, Fms. iii. 143, Lv. 55. all-glaðr, adj. very joyful, Eg. 163, Ld. 176. all-gleymr, adj. very gleeful, mirthful, in high spirits, [glaumr], verða a. við e-t, Sturl. iii. 152, Eb. 36. all-glæsiliga, adj. and -ligr, adv. very shiny, Eb. 34, Fas. iii. 626, Fms. ix. 430. all-glöggsær, adj. very transparent, dearly visible, metaph., þorf. Karl. 380. all-glöggt, n. adj. very exactly, Hkr. iii. 253, Fas. iii. 13. all-góðmannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very kindly, kind, Mag. 6. all-góðr, adj. very good, Nj. 222, Eg. 36, 198. all-greiðliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very easy, easily, Eb. 268: neut. as adv., Eb. l. c. all-grimmliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very grimly, fiercely, Fas. iii. 414. all-grimmr, adj. very cruel, fierce, Hkr. iii. 167. all-grun-samliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very suspiciously, Ísl. ii. 364. all-göfugr, adj. very distinguished, Eg. 598, Bs. i. 60. all-görla, adv. very clearly, precisely, Hkr. iii. 133, Fms. xi. 15. all-görviligr, adj. very stout, manly, Fms. ii. 28. all-hagstæðr, adj. with a very fair wind, Sturl. iii. 109. all-harðligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very hard, stern, Fas. i. 382. all-harðr, adj. very hard, stern, Fms. i. 177: n. sing. severely, Nj. 165, Grág. i. 261. all-háskasamligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very hazardous, Fms. v. 135. all-heiðinn, adj. quite heathen, Fs. 89 (in a verse). all-heilagr, adj. very sacred, Lex. Poët. all-heimskliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very foolish, frantic, Hkr. ii. 190, Fas. iii. 293. all-heimskr, adj. very silly, stupid, Eg. 376, Grett. 159. all-heppinn, adj. very lucky, happy, Lex. Poët. all-herðimikill, adj. very broad-shouldered, Eg. 305. all-hermannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very martial, Fms. xi. 233. all-hjaldrjúgr, adj. very gossipping, chattering, Lv. 57: neut. as adv., Vápn. 10. all-hógliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very gently, Fms. xi. 240, vi. 274. all-hóleitr and -háleitr, adj. very sublime, Hom. 23. all-hór and -hár, adj. very high, tall, v. -hár. all-hratt, n. adj. in all speed, Lex. Poët. all-hraustliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very bravely, Fms. viii. 289, Eb. 34. all-hraustr, adj. very valiant, Fms. viii. 267. all-hreystimannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very valiantly, Fms. xi. 95. all-hrumliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very infirmly from age, Fas. ii. 91. all-hræddr, adj. very much afraid, Fbr. 94. all-hræðinn, adj. very timid, Fms. vi. 155. all-huml;mgsjúkr, adj. very grieved, heart-sick, Hkr. i. 243, Fms. vi. 133. all-hvass, adj. of the wind, blowing very sharp, Fms. ix. 20, Lex. Poët. all-hyggi-ligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very carefully, Fas. iii. 610. all-hýrliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very blandly, with a very bright face, Fas. iii. 636. all-hæðiligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very ridiculous, Finnb. 312. all-hældreginn, adj. walking very much on one’s heels, dragging the heels very much in walking, of an aged or beggarly person, Band. 9. all-hœgliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very softly, meekly, Fms. xi. 389. all-hœlinn, adj. very bragging, Lex. Poët. all-iðinn, adj. very diligent, laborious, Bs. i. 278. all-illa, adv. and -illr, adj. very badly, bad, wicked, Nj. 242, cp. ilia; ill-willed, Eg. 542: compar., vera allver um, to be worse off, Nj. 221 (Ed. allvant); angry, Lv. 145; disgraceful, Eg. 237; unfortunate, Sturl. ii. 47. all-jafnlyndr, adj. very calm, even-tempered, Fms. vi. 287. all-kaldr, adj. very cold, Vápn. 21. all-kappsamliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. with very much zeal, liberally, Hkr. i. 271; veita a., of hospitality, Ld. 292; mæla a., frankly, peremptorily, 296. all-kappsamr, adj. very eager, vehement, Eg. 187. all-karlmannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very manfully, Fms. x. 141. all-kaupmannliga, adv. in a very businesslike, tradesmanlike way, Fms. v.255. all-kátligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very funny, Grett. 112. all-kátr, adj. very joyful, Nj. 18, Eg. 44, 332. all-keppinn, adj. very snappish, Lex. Poët. all-kerskiligr and -keskiligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very sarcastic, biting, Sturl. ii. 196. all-klókr, adj. very shrewd, Hkr. iii. 317. all-knáliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very stoutly, vigorously, Rd. 312. all-kostgæflliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very earnestly, in a very painstaking way, Stj. all-kostigr, adj. very excellent, Lex. Poët. all-kviklatr, adj. very quick, lively, Ld. 270. all-kynliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very strangely, strange, Ísl. ii. 58, Fms. ii. 227, Grett. 160. all-kyrrligr, adj. very quiet, tranquil, Háv. 49. all-kærr, adj. very dear, beloved, Eg. 139, Fms. i. 48; very fond of, Hkr. i. 194: neut., Eg. 116, of mutual love. all-langr, adj. very long, Háv. 49. all-laust, n. adj. very loosely, Fms. xi. 103. all-lágr, adj. very low, short of stature, Fbr. 68. all-lengi, adv. very long, K. Þ. K. 158. all-léttbrúnn, adj. of very brightened, cheerful countenance, Ld. 94. all-léttiliga, adv. very lightly, Fas. iii. 612. all-léttmælt, n. adj., vera a. um e-t, to speak in a very lively way, Fms. iv. 261. all-léttr, adj. very light (in weight), Fas. iii. 487. all-líkliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. in very agreeable, courteous terms, Fas. i. 84. all-likligr, adj. very likely, Fas. ii. 247, Sks. 669. all-líkr, adj. very like, Fas. iii. 579, Sd. 160, Korm. 142. all-lítilfjörligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very puny, prop. having little life in one, Háv. 54. all-lítill, adj. very little, Fær. 268: n. sing. all-lítt, as adv. very little, Nj. 108, 130, Korm. 172; poorly, Grett. 116. all-lyginn, adj. very given to lying, Fbr. 157. all-makligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very deserving, fitting, Sturl. iii. 127, Bjarn. 22. all-mann-fátt, n. adj. with very few people, Gísl. 31. all-mannhættr, adj. very dangerous, Fas. iii. 34. all-mannskæðr, adj. very full of manskathe, very murderous, Fms. ii. 512. all-mannæenligr, adj. a very promising man, Fms. iv. 254. all-mannvænn, adj. a man of very great promise, Hkr. ii. 182. all-margliga, adv. very affably, Sturl. iii. 27. all-margmæltr, part. very talkative, Sturl. ii. 179. all-margr, adj. very numerous, pl. very many, Nj. 32, Grág. ii. 176, Sks. 328, Gþl. 329. all-margrætt, n. adj. part. very much spoken of, Fms. viii. 275. all-málugr, adj. very loquacious, Hkr. iii. 152, 655 xi. 2. all-máttfarinn, adj. very much worn out, with very little strength left, Fas. ii. 356. all-máttlítill, adj. very weak, Fms. i. 159. all-meginlauss, adj. very void of strength, Fms. xi. 103. all-mikilfengligr, adj. very high and mighty, very imposing, Fs. all-mikill, adj. very great, Ísl. ii. 269, Nj. 193, Eg. 29, 39: neut. as adv. greatly, Fms. i. 24, vii. 110. all-mikilmannliga, adv. very nobly, Sturl. i. 33. all-misjafn, adj. very variously, unfavourably, in such phrases as, mæla a. um e-t, there were very different stories about the matter, leggja a. til, ganga a. undir, taka a. á, Eg. 242, Hkr. ii. 123, Fms. i. 86, vii. no, Ld. 166. all-mjór, adj. very slim, slender, narrow, Hkr. iii. 117, Gþl. 173. all-mjök, adv. very much, Nj. 134, Ld. 196, Eg. 19; féllu þá a. menn, in very great numbers, Fms. i. 173. all-myrkr, adj. very dark, Fms. ix. 23. all-mæðiliga, adv. with very great effort, heavily, Fms. ix. 16. all-nauðigr, adj. and -liga, adv. very reluctant, unwilling, Grett. 153; a. staddr, dangerously, Fms. v. 212. all-náinn, adj. very near, nearly related, Sks. 330. all-náttförull, adj. very much given to wandering by night, Lex. Poët. all-níðskárr, adj. of a poet, given to mocking, satirical verse, [níð and skáld (?)], Fms. ii. 7. all-nóg, adv. very abundantly, Sd. 182. all-nær, adv. very near, Fms. vii. 289; metaph., lagði a. at, pretty nearly, well-nigh, Fs., Sks. 684 B. all-nærri, adv. very near, Ld. 202, Fas. iii. 339. all-opt, adv. very often, Anecd. 38, Gþl. 169. all-orðfátt, n. adj. in the phrase, göra a. urn, to be very short of words as to, Bjarn. 31. all-ógurligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very frightful, Edda 41. all-ólmliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very furiously, Fas. iii. 546, Bárð. 177. áll-óttalaust, n. adj. with very little to fear, Eg. 371, v. l. all-ramskipaðr, adj. part. very strongly manned, Fms. iii. 13. all-rauðr, adj. very red, Ld. 182. all-ráðligr, adj. very expedient, advisable, Grett. 145. all-reiðiligr, adj. looking very wrathful, Fms. iv. 161. all-reiðr, adj. very wroth, angry, Edda 57, Nj. 135, Eg. 139. all-ríkmarmligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very grand, pompous, magnificent, Fms. i. 213. all-ríkr, adj. very powerful, Fms. i. 115. all-rýrliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very feebly, puny, Fbr. 28. all-röskliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very smart, brisk, Fms. viii. 317. all-sannligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very likely, ‘soothlike,’ Fms. iv. 270. all-sáttgjarnliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very placable, of mild disposition, Sturl. iii. 288. all-seinn, adj. very slow, Bs. i. 192: neut. as adv. slowly, Grett. 151 A. all-sigrsæll, adj. very victorious, having very good luck in war, Hkr. i. 28. all-skammr, adj. very short, very scant, Nj. 264: neut. substantively, a very short way, Finnb. 324; short distance, Fms. iv. 329. all-skapliga, adv. very fittingly, properly, Grett. 120. all-skapværr, adj. of a very gentle, meek disposition, Sturl. all-skapþungt, n. adj., vera a., to be in a very gloomy, depressed state of mind, Fms. iv. 26. all-skarpr, adj. very sharp, Lex. Poët. all-skeinuhættr, adj. very dangerous, vulnerable, Sturl. ii. 139. all-skemtiligr, adj. very amusing, Sturl. ii. 77. all-skillítill, adj. very slow-witted, dull, Sturl. j. 89. all-skjallkænliga, adv. [skjalla, to flatter], very coaxingly, Grett. 131 A. all-skjótt, n. adj. as adv. very soon, Nj. 236. all-skrautligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very smart, splendid, Fas. ii. 366, Mag. 11. all-skygn, adj. very sharp-sighted, Hrafn. 33. all-skyldr, adj. bound to, very obligatory; neut. = bounden duty, Sks. 484; deserved, Gþl. 61:
    β. nearly related, near akin, Fms. xi. 75. all-skyndiliga, adv. very quickly, Blas. 40. all-skynsamliga, adv. very judiciously, Sturl. iii. 161. all-skyrugr, adj. all curd-besprent, Grett. 107 A. all-sköruliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very frankly, boldly, dignified, Sturl. iii. 39, Fms. ix. 5, Ld. 94 C, 226, Bs. i. all-sljáliga, adv. very slowly, sluggishly, Grett. 101 A. all-smár, adj. very small, Fms. v. 55, xi. 61. all-snarpliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very sharply, smartly, Fms. viii. 346. all-snarpr, adj. very sharp, Fms. i. 38, Nj. 246. all-snemma, adv. very early, Fms. ii. 223. all-snjallr, adj. very shrewd, clever, Fms. viii. 367. all-snúðula, adv. very quickly, Lex. Poët. all-snæfr, adj. very brisk, id. all-snöfurmannligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very brisk and energetic looking, of a man, Fms. xi. 79. all-spakliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very mildly, moderately, wisely, Hkr. ii. 41. all-spakr, adj. very gentle, wise, Fms. vi. 298. all-starsýnn, adj. who stares very hard at a thing, looking fixedly upon, Fms. vi. 203. all-sterkliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very briskly, strongly, Ld. 158, Fas. iii. 612. all-sterkr, adj. very strong, Hkr. i. 238, Eg. 285; Ísl. ii. 461 ( very vehement); as a pr. name, Fms. iii. 183. all-stilliliga, adv. very calmly, in a very composed manner, Ld. 318. all-stirðr, adj. very stiff, Háv. 46. all-stórhöggr, adj. dealing very hard blows, Fms. i. 171. all-stórliga, adv. very haughtily, Hkr. ii. 63, Ld. 168. all-stórmannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very munificently, nobly, Fas. iii. 45; haughtily, Sd. 146. all-stórorðr, adj. using very big words, Eg. 340, Ld. 38 ( very boisterous). all-stórr, adj. very great, metaph. big, puffed up, Ld. 318; dat. all-stórum, as adv. very largely, Edda 32. all-strangr, adj. very rapid, Lex. Poët. all-styggr, adj. very ill-humoured, cross, Grett. 103 A. all-styrkliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very stoutly, Stj. 402. all-styrkr, adj. very strong, Fms. i. 177. all-svangr, adj. very hungry, Lex. Poët. all-svinnliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very wisely, prudently, wise, Fas. i. 95, ii. 266. all-sættfúss, adj. very placable, peace-loving, very willing to accept an atonement, Sturl. iii. 19. all-sœmiliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very seemly, decorous, honourable, Hkr. i. 215, Ísl. ii. 163. all-tiginn, adj. very princely, Lex. Poët. all-tillátsamr, adj. very indulgent, lenient, Þórð. 12. all-tíðrætt, n. adj. very much talked of, much spoken of, Eg. 99, Sturl. i. 199. all-tíðvirkr, adj. very quick at work, Fms. xi. 377. all-torfyndr, adj. very hard to find, Fms. vii. 356. all-torfært, n. adj. very hard to pass, cross, Eg. 546. all-torsótt, n. adj. part. very difficult to reach, Eg. 546. all-tortryggiliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very suspiciously, Sturl. ii. 47. all-torveldligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very difficult, Str. all-trauðr, adj. very slow, unwilling, Fms. xi. 39. all-tregr, adj. very tardy, Fær. 114, Bárð. 178. all-trúr, adj. very true. Fms. vi. 377. all-tryggr, adj. very trusty, Hkr. iii. 167. all-tvítugr, false reading, instead of eigi alls t., not quite twenty, Sturl. i. 181. all-undarligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very odd, wonderful, Fms. ii. 150. all-ungr, adj. very young, Eg. 268, Fms. i. 14, Ld. 274. all-úbeinskeyttr, adj. shooting very badly, Fms. ii. 103. all-úblíðr, adj. very harsh, unkind, Fas. ii. all-úbragðligr, adj. very ill-looking, Sturl. iii. 234. all-údæll, adj. very spiteful, untractable, Sturl. i. 99. all-úfagr, adj. very ugly, metaph., Fms. iii. 154. all-úfimliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very awkwardly, Fas. ii. 543. all-úframliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very backward, shy, timid, Fbr. 38 C. all-úfríðr, adj. very ugly, Fms. xi. 227. all-úfrýnn, adj. very sullen, ‘frowning,’ sour, Eg. 525. all-úfrægr, adj. very inglorious, Fms. iv. 259. all-úglaðr, adj. very gloomy, sad, Hkr. iii. 379. all-úhægr, adj. very difficult, Eg. 227. all-úhöfðingligr, adj. very low-looking, very plebeian, Finnb. 222. all-úkátr, adj. very sorrowful, Edda 35, Eg. 223, Fms. i. 37. all-úknár, adj. very weak of frame, Grett. 119 A, very badly knit; Bs. i. 461 (of boys). all-úkonungligr, adj. very unkingly, Fms. viii. 158. all-úkunnigr, adj. quite unknown, Ísl. ii. 412. all-úlífligr, adj. very unlikely to live, Hkr. ii. 200. all-úlíkliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very unlikely, Gísl. 24, Sd. 123, Finnb. 310. all-úlíkr, adj. very unlike, Glúm. 364. all-úlyginn, adj. not at all given to lie, truthful, Fbr. 157. all-úmáttuliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. weakly, very weak, tender, Fms. iv. 318. all-úráðinn, adj. part. very ‘unready’ (cp. Ethelred the ‘unready’), undecided, Lv. 9. all-úráðliga, adv. very unadvisedly, rashly, Odd. 12 old Ed. all-úsannligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very untruthful, unjust; also, unlikely, Fms. vii. 141. all-úsáttfúss, adj. very implacable, unwilling to come to terms, Sturl. iii. 275. all-úskyldr, adj. very strange to, not at all bound to…, Eg. 10. all-úspakr, adj. very unruly, Sturl. ii. 61. all-úsváss, adj. very uncomfortable, of weather, cold and rainy, Bs. i. 509. all-úsýnn, adj. very uncertain, doubtful, Glúm. 358, Sturl. i. 105. all-úsæligr, adj. of very poor, wretched appearance, Niðrst. 109. all-úvinsæll, adj. very unpopular, Fms. iv. 369, Fas. iii. 520. all-úvísliga, adv. very unwisely, Niðrst. 6. all-úvænliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. of very unfavourable prospect, Fas. ii. 266; n. adj. very unpromising, Grett. 148 A. all-úvænn, adi. very ugly, Fas. i. 234; very unpromising, unfavourable, Ísl. ii. 225: neut. as adv. unfavourably, Fms. xi. 134. all-úþarfr, adj. very unthrifty, very unprofitable, something that had better be prevented, Eg. 576, Hkr. ii. 245. all-vandlátr, adj. very difficult, hard to please, Fms. vi. 387. all-vandliga, adv. with very great pains, exactly, carefully, Sks. 658 B. all-vant, n. adj., vera a. um e-t, to be in a very great strait, Nj. 221. all-varfærr, adj. very careful, solicitous, Eg. 63. all-vaskligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very brisk, smart, gallant, Hkr. i. 104; compar. v. alvaskligr. all-vaskr, adj. very brisk, gallant, Fms. viii. 226. all-vandr, adj. very bad, of clothes, much worn, Pm. 11. all-vápndjarfr, adj. very bold, daring in arms, Hkr. iii. 63. all-veðrlítið, n. adj. very calm, with little wind, Fms. vi. 360. all-vegliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very grand, princely, nobly, Fms. i. 20, Eg. 332, Hkr. i. 15. all-vel, adv. very well, Nj. 12, Eg. 78, 198; compar. albetr, v. alvel. all-vesall, adj. very puny, wretched, Nj. 97. all-vesalliga, adv. very wretchedly, Ölk. 35. all-vesalmannliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. id., Ísl. ii. 416. all-vesæll, adj. very miserable, base, vile, Nj. 97. all-vingjarnliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very friendly, amicable, Sturl. ii. 168. all-vingott, n. adj. on very friendly terms, Fbr. 129. all-vinsæll, adj. very popular, used of a man blessed with many friends, Fms. i. 184, ii. 44, Orkn. 104 old Ed. all-virðuligr, adj. and -liga, adv. very worthy, dignified, Fms. x. 84, Bs. i. 83. all-vitr, adj. very wise, Sks. 29 B (superl.) all-vitrliga, adv. very wisely, Fas. ii. 66. all-víða and all-vítt, n. adj. very widely, Hkr. iii. 141, Lex. Poët. all-vígliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. in a very warlike manner, Fms. ix. 488, Fas. ii. 112. all-vígmannliga, adv. very martially, Fas. iii. 150. all-vígmóðr, adj. quite wearied out with fighting, Introd. to Helgakviða (Sæm.) all-víss, adj. very wise, sure, Sks. 520, Lex. Poët.: neut. to a dead certainty, Lex. Poët. all-vænliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very promising, handsome, Glúm. 349, Fms. v. 260, Fbr. 114. all-vænn, adj. id., Clem. 24, Bs. i. 340: neut., þykja a. um, to be in high spirits, Ísl. ii. 361; make much of, Fms. ii. 76; as adv. favourably, Fms. iv. 192. all-vörpuligr, adj. of a very stout, stately frame, Hkr. ii. 254. all-vöxtuligr, adj. very tall, of large growth, Fas. iii. 627. all-þakkligr, adj. very pretty, = þekkiligr, Lex. Poët. all-þakksamliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very thankfully, Fms. i. 120, Ld. 298. all-þarfliga, adv. very thriftily, very pressingly; biðja a., to beg very hard, Edda 45. all-þarfr, adj. very thrifty, Lex. Poët. all-þéttr, adj. very crowded, cp. Lex. Poët. all-þrekligr, adj. of a very robust frame, Hkr. ii. 2. all-þröngr, adj. as neut. in a very great crowd, Edda 24. all-þungliga, adv. and -ligr, adj. very hard, unwilling, reluctant, Sturl. ii. 120; taka a. á e-m, to be very hard upon, Mag. 1. all-þungr, adj. very unfavourable, Hkr. ii. 358; hostile, badly disposed towards, Eb. 108, Eg. 332; þykja a., to dislike, Fms. viii. 441; a. orð, to blame, Sturl. ii. 62. all-þykkr, adj. very thick, Fas. i. 339: n. sing. as adv. thickly, Fms. vii. 70 (of great numbers slain on the battle-field). all-æfr, adj. very furious, wrath, Ísl. ii. 258, Lv. 60, Fas. i. 404. all-ægiligr, adj. very terrible, Dropl. 18. all-æstr, adj. very incited, vehement, Nj. 231. all-örorðr, adj. very quick-tongued, frank, outspoken, Eg. 340. all-öruggliga, adv. very steadfastly, very firmly, Grett. 153 A. all-öruggr, adj. very unflinching, Bs. i. 624.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ALL-

  • 4 frame of mind

    مِزَاج \ frame of mind: state of mind: He’s in a generous frame of mind today. humour: temper; state of mind: Our teacher was in a bad humour this morning. mood: the state of one’s mind and feelings: She’s in a very good mood today; she feels happy. nature: the character of a person or animal: His sons all have generous natures. Donkeys are lazy by nature. temper: the state of one’s feelings (esp. a bad state): He’s generous when he’s in a good temper. My father’s in a temper (He’s angry). temperament: sb.’s personal nature, esp. with regard to mind and feelings: She has an artistic temperament.

    Arabic-English glossary > frame of mind

  • 5 draw the line

    مَيَّزَ \ discern: to see or understand (usu. with some difficulty): I could hardly discern the tree in the dark. discriminate: to make or see a difference (between two things). distinguish: to see the difference (between things): In the darkness I could not distinguish your car from the others. draw the line: to fix a limit to what can be allowed: I don’t mind your keeping rabbits, but I draw the line at rats (I cannot allow them). know: to be able to tell one from another; recognize: I know your son by sight, but we’ve never met. I know all the flowers in this garden. pick out: to recognize and separate (with one’s eyes or hands): Can you pick out your child in this school photograph?. recognize: to know again (sb. or sth. that one has seen before); know (from a picture or description): I recognized him at once by the mark on his face, know again (sth. that one has heard or smelt or felt, etc,. before) Do you recognize that music?. tell: (with can) to know; recognize: Can you tell a queen bee when you see one? Can you tell the difference between these two brothers? Can you tell one from the other? Can you tell them apart? (Can you see the difference between them?). \ See Also تبين (تَبَيَّنَ)، تَعَرَّفَ على

    Arabic-English glossary > draw the line

  • 6 Das ist reine Phantasie.

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Das ist reine Phantasie.

  • 7 Einbildung

    f
    1. (Fantasie) imagination; (falsche Vorstellung) fantasy; Einbildungen illusions; das ist reine Einbildung you’re ( oder he’s etc.) imagining things, it’s all in your etc. mind; nur in jemandes Einbildung existieren be a figment of s.o.’s imagination
    2. nur Sg.; (Dünkel) conceitedness; Einbildung ist auch eine Bildung umg. iro. you’re letting your imagination run away with you!
    * * *
    die Einbildung
    (Dünkel) conceitedness; conceit;
    (Vorstellung) imagination; illusion
    * * *
    Ein|bil|dung
    f
    1) (= Vorstellung) imagination; (= irrige Vorstellung) illusion

    das sind Éínbildungen — that's pure imagination

    das ist alles nur Éínbildung — it's all in the mind, it's just (your/his) imagination

    krank ist er bloß in seiner Éínbildung — he just imagines or thinks he's ill

    2) (= Dünkel) conceit

    an Éínbildungen leiden (hum inf)to be (pretty) stuck on oneself (esp US inf), to really fancy oneself (Brit inf)

    Éínbildung ist auch eine Bildung (hum inf) — he's/she's too conceited for words

    * * *
    die
    1) (too much pride in oneself: He's full of conceit about his good looks.) conceit
    2) (the seeing etc of things which do not exist: There was no-one there - it was just your imagination.) imagination
    * * *
    Ein·bil·dung
    f
    1. kein pl (Fantasie) imagination
    das ist [bloße [o reine]] \Einbildung! it's all in the mind!
    2. kein pl (Arroganz) conceitedness
    3.
    \Einbildung ist auch eine Bildung! (fam) what arrogance!
    du leidest wohl an \Einbildung! (hum fam) you must be joking!
    * * *
    die; Einbildung, Einbildungen
    1) o. Pl. (Fantasie) imagination
    3) o. Pl. (Hochmut) conceitedness
    * * *
    1. (Fantasie) imagination; (falsche Vorstellung) fantasy;
    Einbildungen illusions;
    das ist reine Einbildung you’re ( oder he’s etc) imagining things, it’s all in your etc mind;
    nur in jemandes Einbildung existieren be a figment of sb’s imagination
    2. nur sg; (Dünkel) conceitedness;
    Einbildung ist auch eine Bildung umg iron you’re letting your imagination run away with you!
    * * *
    die; Einbildung, Einbildungen
    1) o. Pl. (Fantasie) imagination
    3) o. Pl. (Hochmut) conceitedness
    * * *
    f.
    conceit n.
    fabulation n.
    imagination n.
    presumption n.
    vanity n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Einbildung

  • 8 sugestión

    f.
    suggestion, advice, counsel.
    * * *
    1 suggestion
    * * *
    SF
    1) (=convencimiento)
    2) (=insinuación) suggestion
    * * *
    * * *
    * * *
    1
    (convencimiento): no estás enferma, es pura sugestión you're not ill, it's all in your mind
    tiene gran poder de sugestión he is very persuasive
    2 (sugerencia) suggestion
    * * *

    sugestión sustantivo femenino ( convencimiento):
    es pura sugestión it's all in your (o his etc) mind;

    tiene gran poder de sugestión he is very persuasive
    sugestión f (acción de sugestionarse) no creo que sea un fantasma, es pura sugestión, I don't think it can be a ghost, it's all in your mind
    tienes un gran poder de sugestión, you are very persuasive

    ' sugestión' also found in these entries:
    English:
    suggestion
    * * *
    1. [acción] suggestion;
    tiene mucho poder de sugestión she has great powers of suggestion
    2. [sugerencia] suggestion
    * * *
    f
    :
    es pura sugestión it is all in the mind
    * * *
    sugestión nf, pl - tiones : suggestion, prompting
    poder de sugestión: power of suggestion

    Spanish-English dictionary > sugestión

  • 9 psychisch

    I Adj. psychological; stärker: mental; Druck, Reaktion etc.: emotional; psychische Belastung mental strain; psychische Krankheit mental illness
    II Adv.: psychisch bedingt psychological, all in the mind umg.; psychisch belastet under mental strain; psychisch krank mentally disturbed
    * * *
    psychic; psychical
    * * *
    psy|chisch ['psyːçɪʃ]
    1. adj
    Belastung, Auswirkungen, Defekt emotional, psychological; Phänomen, Erscheinung psychic; Vorgänge psychological

    psýchische Erkrankung — mental illness

    psýchisch unter großem Druck stehen, unter großem psýchischen Druck stehen — to be under a great deal of emotional or psychological pressure

    2. adv
    abnorm, auffällig psychologically; krank, gestört, labil mentally

    psýchisch gesund/unauffällig — psychologically normal

    sich psýchisch auswirken — to have psychological effects

    psýchisch belastet sein — to be under psychological pressure

    psýchisch erschöpft — emotionally exhausted

    sich psýchisch schlecht fühlen — to feel bad

    eine psýchisch bedingte Krankheit — a psychosomatic illness

    psýchisch gestört — emotionally or psychologically disturbed

    jdn psýchisch beanspruchen — to make emotional or psychological demands on sb

    er ist psýchisch völlig am Ende — his nerves can't take any more

    * * *
    1) (concerned with the mind, especially with supernatural influences and forces that act on the mind and senses.) psychical
    2) (concerned with the mind, especially with supernatural influences and forces that act on the mind and senses.) psychic
    * * *
    psy·chisch
    [ˈpsy:çɪʃ]
    1. (seelisch) emotional, psychological
    eine \psychische Belastung psychological strain
    eine \psychische Ursache haben to be psychological, to have a psychological cause
    unter großem \psychischen Druck stehen to be under a great deal of emotional [or psychological] pressure
    \psychisch bedingt/verursacht sein to be psychological, to have psychological causes/a psychological cause
    jdn \psychisch belasten to put sb under psychological pressure
    2. (geistig) mental
    \psychisch gesund sein to have all one's [mental] faculties [about one]
    * * *
    1.
    Adjektiv psychological; psychological, mental <strain, disturbance, process>; mental < illness>
    2.
    adverbial psychologically

    psychisch gesund/krank sein — be mentally fit/ill

    ein psychisch bedingtes Leidenan illness of psychological origin

    * * *
    A. adj psychological; stärker: mental; Druck, Reaktion etc: emotional;
    psychische Belastung mental strain;
    psychische Krankheit mental illness
    B. adv:
    psychisch bedingt psychological, all in the mind umg;
    psychisch belastet under mental strain;
    psychisch krank mentally disturbed
    * * *
    1.
    Adjektiv psychological; psychological, mental <strain, disturbance, process>; mental < illness>
    2.
    adverbial psychologically

    psychisch gesund/krank sein — be mentally fit/ill

    * * *
    adj.
    psychic adj.
    psychical adj.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > psychisch

  • 10 Fantasie

    f; -, -n
    1. nur Sg.; (Vorstellungskraft) imagination; eine blühende Fantasie a vivid imagination; eine schmutzige Fantasie a dirty mind; (viel / wenig) Fantasie haben have (plenty of / little) imagination; die Fantasie anregen stimulate the imagination; nichts der Fantasie überlassen leave nothing to the imagination; das ist reine Fantasie oder das existiert nur in deiner etc. Fantasie it’s all in the mind, you’re etc. imagining things; durchgehen 3, Lauf 7, Reich
    2. (Vorstellung) fantasy (auch sexuell); eines Kranken: hallucination(s); sich in Fantasien flüchten escape into a fantasy world ( oder world of fantasy)
    3. MUS. fantasia
    * * *
    Fan|ta|sie I [fanta'ziː]
    f -, -n
    [-'ziːən]
    1) no pl (= Einbildung) imagination

    er hat Fantasíé — he's got imagination

    eine schmutzige Fantasíé haben — to have a dirty mind

    in seiner Fantasíé — in his mind or imagination

    er spielt ohne Fantasíé — he plays unimaginatively or without any imagination

    seiner Fantasíé freien Lauf lassen — to give free rein to one's imagination

    2) usu pl (= Trugbild, Vorstellung) fantasy
    See:
    auch Phantasie
    II
    f -, -n (MUS)
    fantasia
    * * *
    Fan·ta·sie1RR
    <-, -n>
    [fantaˈzi:, pl -ˈzi:ən]
    f
    1. kein pl (Einbildungsvermögen) imagination no pl
    eine lebhafte [o blühende] /krankhafte/schmutzige \Fantasie haben to have a wild imagination/sick/filthy mind [or filthy imagination
    2. meist pl (Fantasterei) fantasy
    Fan·ta·sie2
    <-, -n>
    [fantaˈzi:, pl -ˈzi:ən]
    f MUS fantasia
    * * *
    die; Fantasie, Fantasien
    1) o. Pl. imagination
    2) meist Pl. (Produkt der Fantasie) fantasy
    * * *
    Fantasie f; -, -n
    1. nur sg; (Vorstellungskraft) imagination;
    eine blühende Fantasie a vivid imagination;
    (viel/wenig) Fantasie haben have (plenty of/little) imagination;
    die Fantasie anregen stimulate the imagination;
    nichts der Fantasie überlassen leave nothing to the imagination;
    Fantasie it’s all in the mind, you’re etc imagining things; durchgehen 3, Lauf 7, Reich
    2. (Vorstellung) fantasy (auch sexuell); eines Kranken: hallucination(s);
    sich in Fantasien flüchten escape into a fantasy world ( oder world of fantasy)
    3. MUS fantasia
    * * *
    die; Fantasie, Fantasien
    1) o. Pl. imagination
    2) meist Pl. (Produkt der Fantasie) fantasy

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Fantasie

  • 11 psychologique

    psychologique [psikɔlɔʒik]
    adjective
    c'est psychologique ! it's all in the mind!
    * * *
    psikɔlɔʒik
    adjectif psychological
    * * *
    psikɔlɔʒik adj
    * * *
    psychologique adj psychological; c'est psychologique! it's all in the mind!, it's psychological!
    [psikɔlɔʒik] adjectif
    1. [méthode, théorie] psychological
    2. MÉDECINE [état, troubles] psychological, mental
    il suffit qu'elle aille parler à son médecin pour aller mieux, c'est psychologique she only has to talk to her doctor to feel better, it's all in her mind
    3. [dimension] psychological
    la vérité psychologique de ces personnages his/her true-to-life characters
    4. [propice]
    le moment ou l'instant psychologique the right ou appropriate moment

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > psychologique

  • 12 viril

    adj.
    virile, manly.
    m.
    crystal case where the consecrated hosts are kept.
    * * *
    1 virile, manly
    * * *
    ADJ virile, manly
    miembro 1., 1)
    * * *
    adjetivo < cualidades> virile, manly
    * * *
    = virile, manly [manlier -comp., manliest -sup], red-blooded.
    Ex. The article 'Not all in the mind: the virile profession' discusses the factors leading to the origin of the stereotype librarian.
    Ex. First of all, video games are often best enjoyed simultaneously with other manly activities such as chewing and drinking.
    Ex. What's the ordinary response if you're a red-blooded American consumer? I mean, you scream like hell and run to the store and demand your money back.
    ----
    * hombre viril = virile man.
    * * *
    adjetivo < cualidades> virile, manly
    * * *
    = virile, manly [manlier -comp., manliest -sup], red-blooded.

    Ex: The article 'Not all in the mind: the virile profession' discusses the factors leading to the origin of the stereotype librarian.

    Ex: First of all, video games are often best enjoyed simultaneously with other manly activities such as chewing and drinking.
    Ex: What's the ordinary response if you're a red-blooded American consumer? I mean, you scream like hell and run to the store and demand your money back.
    * hombre viril = virile man.

    * * *
    ‹cualidades› virile, manly miembro viril (↑ miembro)
    * * *

    viril adjetivo ‹ cualidades virile, manly
    viril adjetivo virile, manly
    ' viril' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    macho
    - varonil
    English:
    virile
    * * *
    viril adj
    virile, manly
    * * *
    adj virile, manly
    * * *
    viril adj
    : virile
    virilidad nf

    Spanish-English dictionary > viril

  • 13 przechodzić

    1. (-dzę, -dzisz); imp -; perf przejść
    (rzekę, ulicę) to cross; (chorobę, wstrząs) to suffer, to go through; ( trasę) to cover; ( koleje losu) to experience; ( operację) to undergo, to go through
    2.
    ( iść dalej) to pass on, to move on; ( iść obok) to pass by; ( przedostawać się) to go lub pass through; (mijać: o bólu) to pass, to ease; ( o czasie) to pass, to go by; (zostawać zaakceptowanym: o propozycji, wniosku) to go through; ( o ustawie) to be passed; ( o pomyśle) to be accepted

    przechodzić obok czegoś — to pass sth, to go past sth

    przejść do sprawy/konkretów — to get down to business/brass tacks

    przechodzić samego siebie — to excel o.s.

    przejść z kimś na "ty" — to agree to address one another by first names

    przeszło mi przez myśl, że... — it's just occurred to me that...

    * * *
    ipf.
    1. (= przebyć idąc) go, walk; przechodzić obok kogoś/czegoś go l. walk past l. by sb/sth; przechodzić przez granicę cross the border; przechodzić przez most go l. walk across the bridge; przechodzić przez ulicę l. jezdnię cross the street; przejść do ogrodu/innego pokoju go l. move to the garden/another room; przejść przez coś suchą nogą go through sth without wetting one's feet.
    2. (= przesuwać się) pass; burza przeszła bokiem the storm passed by.
    3. (= przetoczyć się) spread ( przez coś across sth); przez całą Europę przeszła zaraza a plague spread across the whole of Europe.
    4. (= zostać przekazanym) be passed, be handed down; (o obowiązkach, władzy) devolve ( na kogoś on l. upon sb); przechodzić z rąk do rąk be passed from hand to hand; przechodzić z pokolenia na pokolenie be handed down from one generation to another; dom przeszedł na Adama the house was inherited by Adam; to wydarzenie przejdzie do historii this event will go down in history; wiadomość przechodziła z ust do ust the news spread from mouth to mouth; wszystkie listy przechodzą przez moje ręce I handle all the letters.
    5. (= przedostawać się przez coś) get through; przeszły mnie ciarki I shivered down my spine; słowa nie chcą mi przejść przez gardło words stick in my throat; ani przez myśl mi nie przeszło, że może go nie być w domu it didn't even cross my mind that he might not be at home.
    6. (= przebiegać, prowadzić dokądś) run; autostrada przejdzie tamtędy the highway will run over there; granica przechodzi wzdłuż rzeki the border runs along the river.
    7. (= mijać) pass; grypa nie chce mi przejść I can't get rid of the flu; koncert przeszedł bez echa the concert passed by unnoticed; nie martw się, to wkrótce przejdzie don't worry, it will soon pass.
    8. (= doświadczać) experience, go through; (szkolenie, operację) undergo; przechodzić kryzys go through a crisis; przechodzić piekło go through hell; przechodzić trudny okres go through a difficult period; go through a rough patch; wiele przeszłam w moim pierwszym małżeństwie I went through a lot in my first marriage.
    9. (= zmieniać stanowisko pracy, firmę) change over ( z czegoś na coś from sth to sth); przejść na chrześcijaństwo convert to Christianity; przejść na emeryturę retire; przejść do następnej klasy get l. be promoted; przejść na wegetarianizm turn vegetarian; przejść nad czymś do porządku dziennego disregard sth, wave sth aside; przejść (z kimś) na ty come to first name terms with sb; przejdę do konkurencji I will go over to our competition; przejdźmy do sprawy let's get down to business; pozwolą państwo, że przejdę do następnego tematu let me pass l. move on to the next topic, let me proceed to the next topic.
    10. (= przekształcać się) turn, develop ( w coś into sth); energia kinetyczna przechodzi w elektryczną kinetic energy turns into electric energy; kłótnia przeszła w bójkę the quarrel developed l. turned into a fight.
    11. (= zostać przyjętym, przegłosowanym) be passed; wniosek przeszedł the motion was passed; jego kandydatura nie przeszła his candidacy was rejected.
    12. (= przewyższać) surpass, excel; przechodzić siebie samego surpass l. excel o.s.; przechodzić czyjeś oczekiwania exceed sb's expectations; przechodzić czyjeś najśmielsze marzenia be beyond one's wildest dreams; to przechodzi ludzkie pojęcie this all staggers the mind; twoje zachowanie przechodzi granice mojej cierpliwości your behavior is more than I can endure l. stand.
    pf.
    (= chodzić przez jakiś czas) walk, spend some time walking; przechodził całą noc he spent the whole night walking.

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > przechodzić

  • 14 psychique

    psychique [psi∫ik]
    adjective
    * * *
    psiʃik
    adjectif [activité, troubles] mental
    * * *
    psiʃik adj
    * * *
    psychique adj [activité, troubles] mental.
    [psiʃik] adjectif
    1. MÉDECINE [blocage] mental
    [troubles] mental, psychic (terme spécialisé)
    2. (familier) [psychologique] psychological
    je ne peux pas voir une souris sans défaillir, c'est psychique I feel faint whenever I see a mouse, I know it's all in the mind but I can't help it
    ————————
    [psiʃik] nom masculin
    chez lui, c'est le psychique qui va mal he's got a psychological problem

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > psychique

  • 15 sugestija

    f suggestion; hint, tip, pointer, guideline | na nečiju -u on/at the s. of, at smb's s.; iznijeti -u make (ili put forward) a s.; sve je to samo (auto)sugestijaa it's all in the mind
    * * *
    • suggestion

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > sugestija

  • 16 erträumen

    v/t: ( sich [Dat]) erträumen dream of; imagine
    * * *
    er|träu|men [ɛɐ'trɔymən] ptp erträumt
    vt
    to dream of, to imagine

    eine erträumte Weltan imaginary world

    das war alles nur erträumtit was all in the mind

    etw erträ́úmen — to dream of sth, to imagine sth

    * * *
    er·träu·men *
    vt
    [sich dat] jdn/etw \erträumen to dream about [or of] sb/sth
    * * *
    reflexives Verb dream of
    * * *
    erträumen v/t: (
    sich [dat])
    erträumen dream of; imagine
    * * *
    reflexives Verb dream of

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > erträumen

  • 17 Das ist reine Phantasie.

    ausdr.
    It's all in the mind. expr.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Das ist reine Phantasie.

  • 18 Einbildung

    Ein·bil·dung f
    1) kein pl ( Fantasie) imagination;
    das ist [bloße [o reine]] \Einbildung! it's all in the mind!
    2) kein pl ( Arroganz) conceitedness
    WENDUNGEN:
    \Einbildung ist auch eine Bildung! ( fam) what arrogance!;
    du leidest wohl an \Einbildung! (wohl an \Einbildung!) ( fam) you must be joking!

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch für Studenten > Einbildung

  • 19 umišljati

    vi impf (i umišljati sebi) be/become conceited, have a high opinion of oneself; be puffed up, have a big ego/head; (krivo) be mistaken about | šta ti -š sebi? who do you think you are?; nemoj sebi -ti don't get any ideas; čovjek to samo -a it's all in the mind

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > umišljati

  • 20 todo el tiempo

    = all of the time, left, right and centre, the whole time, all the while
    Ex. Many others besides Rothstein have suspected the truth of these figures for years, bearing in mind Robert Kennedy's hardbitten politician's conclusion that `one fifth of the people are against everything all of the time' = Muchos otros junto con Rothstein han sospechado durante años de la verdad de estos datos, teniendo presente la conclusión del político escarmentado Robert Kennedy de que "una quinta parte de la gente está en contra de todo siempre".
    Ex. It hasn't helped that the Americans are being so unilateralist and pulling out of treaties left, right and centre.
    Ex. The gentleman was sobbing his heart out the whole time but was totally transformed by the experience.
    Ex. The males are the ones who bob and bow and hop around, warbling all the while.
    * * *
    = all of the time, left, right and centre, the whole time, all the while

    Ex: Many others besides Rothstein have suspected the truth of these figures for years, bearing in mind Robert Kennedy's hardbitten politician's conclusion that `one fifth of the people are against everything all of the time' = Muchos otros junto con Rothstein han sospechado durante años de la verdad de estos datos, teniendo presente la conclusión del político escarmentado Robert Kennedy de que "una quinta parte de la gente está en contra de todo siempre".

    Ex: It hasn't helped that the Americans are being so unilateralist and pulling out of treaties left, right and centre.
    Ex: The gentleman was sobbing his heart out the whole time but was totally transformed by the experience.
    Ex: The males are the ones who bob and bow and hop around, warbling all the while.

    Spanish-English dictionary > todo el tiempo

См. также в других словарях:

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  • All in the Mind (The Verve song) — Infobox Single Name = All in the Mind Artist = The Verve from Album = B side = One Way to Go , A Man Called Sun Released = March 9, 1992 Format = 7 , 12 , CD Recorded = Genre = Psychedelic rock Length = 4:16 Label = Hut Records Writer = The Verve …   Wikipedia

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  • The Mind of an Ape — is a 1983 book by David and Ann James Premack. In it, the authors argue that it is possible to teach language to (non human) great apes. They write that: We now know that someone who comprehends speech must know language, even if he or she cannot …   Wikipedia

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