NATURE


Meaning of NATURE in English

I. ˈnāchə(r) noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin natura, from natus, (past participle of nasci to be born) + -ura -ure — more at nation

1. dialect England : normal and characteristic quality, strength, vigor, or resiliency

she cooked the meat till it lost all its nature

2.

a. : the essential character or constitution of something

the nature of the controversy

inquire into the nature of heredity — Theodosius Dobzhansky

especially : the essence or ultimate form of something

b. : the distinguishing qualities or properties of something

the nature of mathematics

the nature of a literary movement

3.

a. : the fundamental character, disposition, or temperament of a living being usually innate and unchangeable

it was in his nature to look after others — F.A.Swinnerton

devotion that it was not in her nature to return — Naomi Lewis

b. : the fundamental character, dispostion, or temperament of mankind as a whole : human nature b

not interested in any particular man … but in the nature of man — Peter Dunne

c.

(1) : a specified kind of individual character, disposition, or temperament

his kindly nature

(2) : a being possessing or characterized by such a specified character, disposition, or temperament

who, like so many buoyant natures, had a talent for worrying — S.H.Adams

4. : a creative and controlling agent, force, or principle operating in something and determining wholly or chiefly its constitution, development, and well-being:

a. : such a force or agency in the universe acting as a creative guiding intelligence : a set of principles held to be established for the regulation of the universe or observed in its operation

b. : an inner driving or prompting force (as instinct, appetite, desire) or the sum of such forces in an individual

5. : a life-giving or health-giving force in an animate being

6. : kind, order, or general character

most of his public acts are of a ceremonial nature — London Calling

island songs of a Hawaiian nature — Eve Langley

7. : the qualities, characteristics, properties, organs, and functions that together make up the vital being of a human being or other organism:

a. : such organs or functions requiring nourishment

b. : an excretory organ or function — usually used in the phrase call of nature

8. : normality especially as prescribed by law for sexual relations — usually used in the phrase against nature

their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature — Rom. 1:26 (Authorized Version)

— compare crime against nature

9. : feeling (as kindliness or affection) that is genuine, spontaneous, or unstudied in expression : naturalness 2

that no compunctious visitings of nature shake my fell purpose — Shakespeare

10.

a.

(1) : the created world in its entirety

(2) : the totality of physical reality exclusive of things mental

b. : the total system of spatiotemporal phenomena and events that can be explained by other occurrences in the same system

11. : the state of an unregenerate soul

the difference between a state of nature and a state of grace — Robert South

the congenital nature of men is evil, the goodness in them acquired — E.R.Hughes

12.

a. : a theoretical condition or stage of existence usually held to reveal man in his original or proper state: as

(1) : the normal and ideal character both of particular things and of the universe as a whole sometimes equated with reason and the rational

the full meaning of the Stoic injunction that we live according to nature — Frank Thilly

(2) : a simple, undomesticated, uncivilized mode of life among primitive men having few wants and obligations : a state of existence preceding the foundation of organized society

b. : a simplified mode of life especially as lived out of doors apart from communities and other civilizing and restraining influences

escape from civilization and get back to nature

13. : substance or essence that is the principle of specific proper acts or operations

the union of two natures in Christ

in the Trinity, three persons in one divine nature

14. : the genetically controlled qualities of an organism

nature … modified by nurture — E.G.Conklin

— compare nurture

15. : a particular order of existence or of existing things that is the subject matter of art: as

a. : one having an unchanged as contrasted with a developed, ordered, perfected, or man-made character

b. : real and objective existence : the world of mind and matter external to an observer : reality as observed

c. : the aspect of out-of-doors (as a landscape) : natural scenery

Synonyms: see type

II. intransitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Medieval Latin naturare, from Latin natura

: to give to each thing its specific nature

III. “, in sense 2 nəˈtu̇(ə)r adjective

Etymology: nature (I)

1. : of or relating to nature

2.

[French, plain, unadulterated (used of food or drink), from nature, n.]

: brut

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.