What is the meaning of SOUL. Phrases containing SOUL
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Acronyms & AI meanings
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The second day of November; a feast day of the Roman Catholic church, on which supplications are made for the souls of the faithful dead.
SOUL
n.
Specifically, moral excellence; integrity of character; purity of soul; performance of duty.
n.
One of a class of fabled female water spirits who might receive a human soul by intermarrying with a mortal.
n.
The leader; the inspirer; the moving spirit; the heart; as, the soul of an enterprise; an able general is the soul of his army.
n.
A blood-sucking ghost; a soul of a dead person superstitiously believed to come from the grave and wander about by night sucking the blood of persons asleep, thus causing their death. This superstition is now prevalent in parts of Eastern Europe, and was especially current in Hungary about the year 1730.
v. t.
To deprive of soul, spirit, or principle.
a.
Containing no immaterial quality; destitute of mind or soul.
v. i.
To leave the body; to be disembodied; -- said of the soul or spirit.
a.
Not dying; imperishable; unending; immortal; as, the undying souls of men.
n.
The palace of immortality, inhabited by the souls of heroes slain in battle.
v. i.
Fig.: Any morbid corrupting quality in intellectual or moral conditions; something that poisons the mind or the soul; as, the virus of obscene books.
n.
The mythological place of departed souls; Hades.
v. t.
To carry away with vehement emotion, as joy, sorrow, complacency, anger, etc.; to ravish with pleasure or ecstasy; as, music transports the soul.
n.
The spiritual, rational, and immortal part in man; that part of man which enables him to think, and which renders him a subject of moral government; -- sometimes, in distinction from the higher nature, or spirit, of man, the so-called animal soul, that is, the seat of life, the sensitive affections and phantasy, exclusive of the voluntary and rational powers; -- sometimes, in distinction from the mind, the moral and emotional part of man's nature, the seat of feeling, in distinction from intellect; -- sometimes, the intellect only; the understanding; the seat of knowledge, as distinguished from feeling. In a more general sense, "an animating, separable, surviving entity, the vehicle of individual personal existence."
v. t.
To indue with a soul; to furnish with a soul or mind.
a.
Furnished with a soul; possessing soul and feeling; -- used chiefly in composition; as, great-souled Hector.
a.
Being without a soul, or without greatness or nobleness of mind; mean; spiritless.
n.
Any evidence or memorial of victory or conquest; as, every redeemed soul is a trophy of grace.
n.
A human being; a person; -- a familiar appellation, usually with a qualifying epithet; as, poor soul.
adv.
In a soulless manner.
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