This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1890 Excerpt: ...m m (a sufferer), patient (enduring), compatible (harmonizing with, enduring together), passive (suffering, submitting, enduring), passion (strong feeling), compassion (suffering or feeling with). L. pati, passus. Pat--walk; peripatetic (walking around). G. pateo. G. pates, path. Pater; patr--father; paternal, paMcian ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1890 Excerpt: ...m m (a sufferer), patient (enduring), compatible (harmonizing with, enduring together), passive (suffering, submitting, enduring), passion (strong feeling), compassion (suffering or feeling with). L. pati, passus. Pat--walk; peripatetic (walking around). G. pateo. G. pates, path. Pater; patr--father; paternal, paMcian (of noble rank, like the Roman senators, or fathers), patriarch,68 patrimony (inheritance from a father), patronm (a protector, as of a father), paironymic (a father's name modified f). L. pater, patri. Path--feel, suffer; pathetic (stirring the feelings), pathos (that which causes feeling), antipathy (intense dislike, a feeling against), homoeopathy (see homce), hydropathy (see hydr), allopathy (see all), sympathy1 (a feeling with another in his troubles). G. pathein. Patr--See pater. Patri--country, race; patriot (a lover of his country), expatriate (to send into exile, out of one's country). L. patria. G. patria. L. G. pater, father. The Roman senate was restricted to wealthy and noble families, the common people (or plebs, plebeians) being excluded for centuries from participation in the government. Hence the real nobility or aristocracy came to mean those families of senatorial rank and dignity; that is, those families which had supplied at some time a member to the senate (patres). On account of the exclusiveness of the patricians, and their undisguised disdain for the plebeians, or common people, the term patrician came to include, somewhat, the idea of haughtiness or disdain. But its principal sense includes the better qualities of a true nobility. t Patronymics were very common in early Greece. The heroes of the Iliad all (or nearly all) had patronymics. Achilles, the son of Pelens, was called Pelides; Agamemnon, the son of Atr...
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