affection
noun
- feeling or type of love
- fronting of vowels in the main syllable of a word
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /əˈfɛk.ʃən/ / /əˈfɛk.t͡ʃən/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English affection, affeccion, affeccioun, from Old French affection, from Latin affectiōnem, from affectiō; equivalent to affect + -ion.
- The act of affecting or acting upon.
- The state of being affected, especially: a change in, or alteration of, the emotional state of a person or other animal, caused by a subjective affect (a subjective feeling or emotion), which arises in response to a stimulus which may result from either thought or perception.
- An attribute; a quality or property; a condition.
“A Porism is a proposition in which it is proposed to demonstrate that some one thing, or more things than one, are given, to which, as also to each of innumerable other things, not given indeed, but which have the same relation to those which are given, it is to be shewn that there belongs some common affection described in the proposition.”
- An emotion; a feeling or natural impulse acting upon and swaying the mind.
“Our affections for wild animals are distributed very unevenly. Take insects.”
“It is known that each individual has a variety of affections, one affection when in joy, another when in grief, another when in sympathy and compassion, another when in sincerity and truth, another when in love and charity, another when in zeal or in anger, another when in simulation and deceit, another when in quest of honor and glory, and so on.”
- A feeling of love or strong attachment; a feeling of enjoyable and comforting fondness.
“I have a lot of affection for my little sister.”
“The marriage therapist suggested they show each other more affection.”
- A disease; a morbid symptom; a malady.
“a pulmonary affection”
“The recedent or retrograde form is marked by a sudden subsidence of the inflammatory state of the joints, succeeded immediately by an affection of some internal part, where is thenceforth the seat of the morbid manifestations.”
verb
Etymology: From Middle English affection, affeccion, affeccioun, from Old French affection, from Latin affectiōnem, from affectiō; equivalent to affect + -ion.
- To feel affection for.
“Why, truth is truth, I do not think my lady Isabella ever much affectioned my young lord, your son: yet he was a sweet youth as one should see.”