单词 | inspiration |
释义 | inspirationn. I. Literal (physical) senses. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > [noun] > producing blast or current of air > blowing (up, into, or on) inspiration1513 sufflation1599 insufflation1823 1513 G. Douglas in tr. Virgil Æneid xii. Prol. 75 The sulȝe spred hyr braid bosum on breid, Zephyrus comfortabill inspiratioun For till ressaue. 1708 Ld. Shaftesbury Let. conc. Enthusiasm 43 Their strange Voices..are admirably well acted, by the..Inspiration of Pipes. 2. a. The action, or an act, of breathing in or inhaling; the drawing in of the breath into the lungs in respiration. (Opposed to expiration n. 2.) ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > respiratory organs > breathing > inhalation > [noun] inbreathing1382 draught1490 attraction1528 inspiring1528 inspiration1564 inhalation1623 inhaling1820 insufflation1823 inhalement1840 inhaustion1854 inbreath1921 1564 W. Bullein Dialogue against Fever Pestilence f. 26v This is a dispersed pestilence, by the inspiracion of the ayre. 1607 E. Grimeston tr. S. Goulart Admirable & Memorable Hist. 440 That a Priest at Rome lived fortie yeares with the onely inspiration of the aire. 1650 J. Bulwer Anthropometamorphosis 79 The Nostrils serve for expiration and inspiration. 1753 N. Torriano tr. J. B. L. Chomel Hist. Diss. Gangrenous Sore Throat 124 A sore Throat, which she received by Inspiration of foul Air. 1774 O. Goldsmith Hist. Earth VII. 59 Upon going down he [sc. the diver] takes in a very long inspiration. 1850 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. IV. 1086/2 In Inspiration the lungs are passive. 1872 C. Darwin Expression Emotions Man & Animals xii. 284 We can draw a full and deep inspiration much more easily through the widely open mouth than through the nostrils. b. transferred. A drawing in of air; the absorption of air in the ‘respiration’ of plants. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > gas > air > moving air > [noun] > producing blast or current of air > drawing in of air inspiration1785 the world > plants > by nutrition or respiration > [noun] > absorption of oxygen respiration1790 inspiration1838 1785 T. Jefferson Notes Virginia v. 38 Regular inspirations and expirations of air, by caverns and fissures. 1838 T. Thomson Chem. Org. Bodies 1001 Plants will not live without this nightly inspiration, even though supplied with carbonic acid, provided the oxygen formed by them during the day be constantly withdrawn at the approach of night. II. Figurative senses. 3. The action of inspiring; the fact or condition of being inspired (in sense 4a or 5a of inspire v.); a breathing or infusion into the mind or soul. a. spec. (Theology, etc.) A special immediate action or influence of the Spirit of God (or of some divinity or supernatural being) upon the human mind or soul; said esp. of that divine influence under which the books of Scripture are held to have been written.Various views have been held as to the inspiration of Scripture, such as those of verbal inspiration, according to which every word written was dictated by the Spirit of God; plenary inspiration, according to which the inspiration of the writers extends to all subjects treated of, so that all their statements are to be received as infallibly true; moral inspiration, according to which the inspiration is confined to the moral and religious teaching imparted; dynamical inspiration, mechanical inspiration (see dynamical adj. 3). ΘΚΠ society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > inspiration or revelation > [noun] lightOE lightingOE inspiration1303 illuminationsc1340 inyettingc1340 revelationc1384 oraclec1425 revealingc1429 informationc1450 infusionc1450 illustrationc1480 gospel1481 aspirationc1534 illuminating1561 afflation1576 entheos1594 enthusiasm1595 flame-light1611 illapse1614 inspirement1616 spiration1629 respirationa1631 irradiation1631 income1647 afflatus1649 theopneustian1660 entheasm1752 prana1785 inflation1835 theopneusty1847 inflatusa1861 theopneustia1894 1303 R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 7746 Þurghe grete þan ynspyracyun, He þoghte so on hys [Christ's] passyun. a1340 R. Rolle Comm. on Canticles in Psalter xliv. 2 [xlv. 1] Þe vertu of godis inspiracioun. a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. cxix. f. lvii Seynt Augustyne..warnyd them by maner of Inspyracion, yt sene they wolde not receyue Peace of theyr Bretherne, they shuld of other receyue warre and wreche. 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. DDDiii The inspiracions of the holy goste. 1526 Bible (Tyndale) 2 Tim. iii. 16 All scripture geven by inspiracion of god is proffitable to teache, to improve, to informe, and to instruct in rightewesnes. 1530 Myroure Oure Ladye (Fawkes) (1873) ii. 173 He sente the holy goste on Penthecoste sondaye to enspyracyon of hys dyscyples. 1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer ii. f. cccxxxvi I thynke to perfourme this worke..as my thynne wytte, with inspyracion of hym that hyldeth al grace wol suffre. 1611 M. Smith in Bible (King James) Transl. Pref. 3 The Prophets, who teach us by diuine inspiration. 1692 R. South 12 Serm. I. 466 The..Principle..was certainly first..fetched up from the very bottom of Hell; and utter'd..by particular and immediate inspiration of the Devil. 1793 R. Hawker (title) Evidence of a Plenary Inspiration; a Letter to Mr. T. Porter, in Reply to his Defence of Unitarianism. 1841 Penny Cycl. XIX. 429/2 Theologians who hold the theory of plenary but not verbal inspiration. 1860 B. F. Westcott Introd. Study Gospels (ed. 5) App. B. 451 The early Fathers teach us that Inspiration is an operation of the Holy Spirit acting through men, according to the laws of their constitution. 1865 M. Arnold Ess. Crit. ix. 272 The noblest souls of whatever creed..have insisted on the necessity of an inspiration, a living emotion, to make moral action pefect. 1896 Duke of Argyll Philos. Belief 370 They warn us that there may be inspirations from below, as well as from above. b. gen. A breathing in or infusion of some idea, purpose, etc. into the mind; the suggestion, awakening, or creation of some feeling or impulse, esp. of an exalted kind. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > inspiration > [noun] onesprutea1400 exaltationa1513 raisedness1645 inspiration1651 exaltedness1816 duende1956 the mind > emotion > aspects of emotion > quality of affecting the emotions > [noun] > imbuing with some emotion inspiration1651 the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > introduction or bringing in > [noun] > infusion shedding1398 influencec1430 infusionc1450 inflowing1530 infounding1532 afflation1576 influxion1605 influx1626 information1630 inspiration1651 overshadowing1665 influct1675 bedewmenta1680 inflow1848 the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > inventive or creative faculty > creative genius > [noun] > inspiration Hippocrene1598 afflatus1649 inspiration1651 1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan ii. xxix. 169 Why any man should take the law of his country rather than his own Inspiration, for the rule of his action. 1692 tr. C. de Saint-Évremond Misc. Ess. 206 There are some Men, jealous of the Honour of their motions, who refuse all things at the Inspirations of others. 1769 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) I. vii. 48 The melancholy madness of poetry, without the inspiration. 1805 J. Foster Ess. i. ii. 27 A mind adapted and habituated to converse with the inspirations of nature. 1841 R. W. Emerson Love in Ess. 1st Ser. (London ed.) 177 Men have written good verses under the inspiration of passion, who cannot write well under any other circumstances. 1858 T. J. Hogg Life Shelley II. 416 Inspired with the soft inspiration of strong, sound ale. 1876 J. B. Mozley Univ. Serm. (1877) v. 108 There is inspiration in numbers, in men acting at once and together. c. The suggestion or prompting (from some influential quarter) of the utterance or publication of particular views or information on some public matter. (Cf. inspire v. 7, inspired adj. 5.) ΘΚΠ the mind > will > motivation > [noun] > incitement or instigation > suggestion > of utterance or publication inspiration1880 1880 Christian World No. 1195. 137 Correspondents..write in the interest, if not at the inspiration of the authorities. 1897 Daily News 13 Mar. 3/1 Mr. Goschen said it was not due to inspiration..No idea had been given to the journal. 4. transferred. a. Something inspired or infused into the mind; an inspired utterance or product. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > inspiration > [noun] > something (which is) inspired inspiration1819 revelation1843 the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > inventive or creative faculty > creative genius > [noun] > inspiration > product of flight1667 inspiration1819 poiesis1850 poesis1903 1819 Ld. Byron Proph. Dante iv. 2 Many are poets who have never penn'd Their inspiration. 1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems lxiv. 321 They..Pour'd grave inspiration, a prophet chant to the future. 1879 G. A. Sala in Daily Tel. 8 May Mr. G. F. Boughton's charming figure of ‘Priscilla’, an inspiration from Longfellow's ‘Miles Standish’. b. An inspiring principle. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > excitement > inspiration > [noun] > inspiring principle inspiration1865 1865 J. B. Mozley 8 Lect. Miracles vii. 146 To say that the inspiration of the missionary cause has been the belief in Christian doctrine is almost superfluous. 1869 J. B. Brown Misread Passages ix. 125 Christian charity, charity which has Christ for its model and inspiration. 1873 R. Browning Red Cotton Night-cap Country iv. 261 Whatever motive your own souls supply As inspiration. 5. In combinations. ΚΠ 1894 Nation (N.Y.) 23 Aug. 144/3 Inspiration-like insight. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < |
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