Synonyms: feeling, emotion, passion, sentiment
These nouns refer to complex and usually strong subjective human response.
- Although feeling and emotion are sometimes interchangeable, feeling is the more general and neutral:
.... "Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity" William Wordsworth. - Emotion often implies the presence of excitement or agitation:
.... "Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion" T.S. Eliot. - Passion is intense, compelling emotion:
.... "They seemed like ungoverned children inflamed with the fiercest passions of men" Francis Parkman. - Sentiment often applies to a thought or opinion arising from or influenced by emotion:
.... We expressed our sentiments about the government's policies.
The word can also refer to delicate, sensitive, or higher or more refined feelings:
.... "The mystic reverence, the religious allegiance, which are essential to a true monarchy, are imaginative sentiments that no legislature can manufacture in any people" Walter Bagehot.
Synonyms: opinion, view, sentiment, feeling, belief, conviction, persuasion
These nouns signify something a person believes or accepts as being sound or true.
- Opinion is applicable to a judgment based on grounds insufficient to rule out the possibility of dispute:
.... "A little group of willful men, representing no opinion but their own, have rendered the great Government of the United States helpless and contemptible" Woodrow Wilson. - View stresses individuality of outlook:
... "My view is . . . that freedom of speech means that you shall not do something to people either for the views they have or the views they express" Hugo L. Black. - Sentiment and especially feeling stress the role of emotion as a determinant:
... "If men are to be precluded from offering their sentiments on a matter which may involve the most serious and alarming consequences . . . reason is of no use to us" George Washington.
.... "There needs protection . . . against the tyranny of the prevailing opinion and feeling" John Stuart Mill. - A belief is a conclusion to which one subscribes strongly:
... "Our belief in any particular natural law cannot have a safer basis than our unsuccessful critical attempts to refute it" Karl Popper. - Conviction is belief that excludes doubt:
.... "the editor's own conviction of what, whether interesting or only important, is in the public interest" Walter Lippmann. - Persuasion applies to a confidently held opinion:
... "He had a strong persuasion that Likeman was wrong" H.G. Wells.
.... Am-Heritage
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