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awe

noun

  1. grandiose feeling
L12234 on Wikidata ↗

verb

  1. inspire fear/awe in someone, inspiring of awe, generally positive
L330838 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ɔː/ / /oː/ / /ɔ/

name

  1. A surname.
  2. A short river between Loch Awe and Loch Etive, Argyll and Bute council area, Scotland; in full, the River Awe.

    For nearly four miles, between Loch Awe and Taynuilt, the Callander and Oban section of the L.M.S.R. runs through the Pass of Brander, on the lower slopes of Ben Cruachan, beside the swift-flowing River Awe.

noun

Etymology: Etymology tree French auvebor. English awe Borrowed from French auve.

  1. A bucket (blade) attached to water wheels.

verb

Etymology: From Middle English aw, awe, agh, awȝe, borrowed from Old Norse agi, from Proto-Germanic *agaz (“terror, dread”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂egʰ- (“to be upset, afraid”). Displaced native Middle English eye, eyȝe, ayȝe, eȝȝe, from Old English ege, æge (“fear, terror, dread”), from the same Proto-Germanic root.

  1. To inspire fear and reverence in.

    That large room had always awed Ivor: even as a child he had never wanted to play in it, for all that it was so limitless, the parquet floor so vast and shiny and unencumbered, the windows so wide and light with the fairy expanse of Kensington Gardens.

  2. To control by inspiring dread.

    While a sense of outrage is the only rational response to atrocity, if that outrage is maintained at too high a level over too long a time it can generate feelings of impotence, as we permit ourselves to be awed by this irrational act of violence.