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「adumbration」を含む例文一覧
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--to ascertain their relations to the conditions which surround them, their mutual harmonies and discordances of structure, the bond of union of their parts and their past history, he finds himself, according to the received notions, in a mighty maze, and with, at most, the dimmest adumbration of a plan.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
種とそれを取り巻く条件との関係、構造との相互的な調和と不調和、種の現在の姿と過去の歴史とを結びつける絆を確かめようと努めるなら、一般に認められた概念に照らせば、ひどく混乱しており、せいぜい計画の非常に不鮮明な輪郭しか持ち合わせていないことに気づくことでしょう。 - Thomas H. Huxley『ダーウィン仮説』
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Wiktionary英語版での「adumbration」の意味 |
adumbration
語源
From Latin adumbrātiō (“sketch; outline, silhouette; pretence, semblance”) + -ion (suffix indicating a condition または state). Adumbrātiō is derived from adumbrāre (present active infinitive of adumbrō (“to represent an object with light かつ shade, to shade; to represent in outline, to outline, silhouette, sketch; to cast a shadow on, overshadow, shade; to copy, counterfeit, imitate”)) + -tiō (suffix forming nouns relating to actions または the results of actions).[1] Adumbrō is derived from ad- (prefix meaning ‘to, towards’) + umbrō (“to cast a shadow, to shade; to overshadow”) (from umbra (“shade; shadow; ghost”)).
発音
名詞
adumbration (countable かつ uncountable, 複数形 adumbrations)
- (uncountable) The state of being in shadow or shade; (countable) a shadow.
- 1819, H[ugh] H[enry] Brackenridge, chapter I, in Modern Chivalry: Containing the Adventures of a Captain and Teague O’Regan, His Servant. […], volume II, Pittsburgh, Pa.: Published by R. Patterson & Lambdin; Butler & Lambdin, printers, →OCLC, book I, page 3:
- [O]ne of these, [...] seems to have felt some irritation at the obscurity of certain terms not well understood, being in the Latin, or the Greek language, or derived from thence; so that not being able to get at the root, he could not comprehend the stem of the tree; nor enjoy the adumbration of the branches and foliage.
- (countable) A faint sketch; a brief representation, an outline.
- 1631, Francis [Bacon], “II. Century. [Experiments in Consort Touching Exteriour, and Interiour Sounds.]”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries. […], 3rd edition, London: […] William Rawley; [p]rinted by J[ohn] H[aviland] for William Lee […], paragraph 186, page 54, →OCLC:
- There is another Difference of Sounds, which wee call Exteriour, and Interiour. [...] Wee ſhall therefore enumerate them, rather than preciſely diſtinguiſh them; Though (to make ſome Adumbration of that wee meane) the Interiour is rather an Impulſion or Contuſion of the Aire, than an Eliſion or Section of the ſame.
- 1677, Matthew Hale, “The Fourth Instance of Fact Seeming to Evince the Novity of Mankind, Namely, the Inceptions of the Religions and Deities of the Heathens, and the Deficiency of this Instance”, in The Primitive Origination of Mankind, Considered and Examined According to the Light of Nature, London: Printed by William Godbid, for William Shrowsbery […], →OCLC, section II, page 166:
- 1809, I[ohn] B[ayly] S[ommers] Carwithen, “Discourse III. On the Correspondence of the Brahminical Records, with the Mosaical Account of the Deluge.”, in A View of the Brahminical Religion, in Its Confirmation of the Truth of the Sacred History, and in Its Influence of the Moral Character; […], London: Printed for Cadell and Davies, […]; for J[ohn] M[athew] Gutch, […]; and for J. Parker, […], published 1810, →OCLC, page 83:
- 1985, William A[nthony] Donohue, “Civil Liberties, Communism, and the State”, in The Politics of the American Civil Liberties Union, New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, published 2009, →ISBN, page 128:
- (specifically, heraldry, rare) The supposed practice of displaying only outline of a charge (“image displayed on an escutcheon”), sometimes filled in with a darker shade than the field.
- 1793, James Dallaway, “Sect. II”, in Inquiries into the Origin and Progress of the Science of Heraldry in England. With Explanatory Observations on Armorial Ensigns, Gloucester, Gloucestershire: Printed by R[obert] Raikes, for T[homas] Cadell, […], →OCLC, pages 110–111:
- It is ſaid, that ſome [emblazoned shields] bore the outline or tracing only, inſtead of the armorial figures complete; becauſe, having loſt the ſeigniory, they retained only the ſhadow of their property and conſequence. In the ſtate of the practice of delineating coat armour in the fourteenth century, it may be doubted, whether the adumbration of figures could be ſatisfactorily deſigned; and it is therefore to be allowed rather as an imaginary diſtinction, than as implying, what we have no authority to decide upon, that when the patrimonial eſtate was alienated, the poſſeſſor, in every inſtance, made at the ſame time a ceſſion of his hereditary bearing.
- 1893, James Balfour Paul, “Introduction”, in An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland, Edinburgh: William Green & Sons, →OCLC, pages xiii–xiv:
- The mysterious adumbration or shadowing which occurs in some of the Hamilton coats, is also interesting, because rare, though it hardly bears out the statement of some writers that it was adopted by families who, having lost their possessions, and consequently being unable to maintain their dignity, chose rather to bear their hereditary arms adumbrated than abandon them altogether.
- (countable, uncountable, figuratively) A rough or symbolic representation; a vague indication of what is to come, a foreshadowing.
- 1669, Thomas Browne; Thomas Keck, annotator, Religio Medici. […], 6th corrected and amended edition, London: Printed by Ja[mes] Cotterel, for Andrew Crook, →OCLC, section 10, page 19:
- [W]here there is an obſcurity too deep for our Reaſon, 'tis good to ſit down with a deſcription, periphraſis, or adumbration; for by acquainting our reaſon how unable it is to diſplay the viſible and obvious effects of nature, it becomes more humble and ſubmiſſive unto the ſubtilties of faith: [...]
- 1833, Daniel Wilson, “Lecture XXIV. The Sound Interpretation of the Records of Revelation.”, in The Evidences of Christianity: Stated in a Popular and Practical Manner, in a Course of Lectures, Delivered in the Parish Church of St. Mary, Islington. [...] In Two Volumes (Library of Religious Knowledge; VI), 2nd revised and improved edition, volume II (Containing the Lectures on the Internal Evidences), Boston, Mass.: Published by Crocker and Brewster, […]; New York, N.Y.: Jonathan Leavitt, […], →OCLC, page 280:
- 2004, Fleming Rutledge, “Prologue: The Hobbit”, in The Battle for Middle-Earth: Tolkien’s Divine Design in The Lord of the Rings, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 21:
- He [John Ronald Reuel Tolkien] came to think of his story as a reflection of, or adumbration of, the biblical drama of redemption. In the years following the publication of The Lord of the Rings, his letters disclose an increasingly explicit commitment on his part to the link between his story and the greater Story of which God is the sole Author.
- 2008, Diana Stirling, “Online Learning in Context”, in Jan Visser and Muriel Visser-Valfrey, editors, Learners in a Changing Learning Landscape: Reflections from a Dialogue on New Roles and Expectations, Dordrecht: Springer Science+Business Media, , →ISBN, abstract, page 164:
- It will be argued that the lack of adumbrations in online communication necessitates explicit communication by participants in the process of co-creating meaning and context density.
- (countable, philosophy, specifically phenomenology) The form of an object as seen by an observer.
- 1983, Edmund Husserl, “Consciousness and Natural Actuality”, in F. Kersten, transl., Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy: First Book: General Introduction to a Pure Phenomenology, paperback edition, The Hague; Boston, Mass.: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers; Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, part 2 (The Considerations Fundamental to Phenomenology), §44 (Merely Phenomenal Being of Something Transcendent, Absolute Being of Something Immanent), page 94:
- Of necessity a physical thing can be given only "one-sidedly;" and that signifies, not just incompletely or imperfectly in some sense or other, but precisely what presentation by adumbrations prescribes.
- 1991, Christopher Macann, “The Impossibility of a Phenomenological Constitution of the Flux of Inner Time Consciousness”, in Presence and Coincidence: The Transformation of Transcendental into Ontological Phenomenology (Phaenomenologica; 119), Dordrecht: Springer Science+Business Media, , →ISBN, page 65:
- Just as the intentional horizon of the spatial object is made up of those adumbrations which would be implied were I to walk around the object and view it from different points of view, so the intentional horizon of the temporal object is made up of retentions and protensions.
- 1995, Herman Philipse, “Transcendental Idealism”, in Barry Smith and David Woodruff Smith, editors, The Cambridge Companion to Husserl, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, published 1999 (reprint), →ISBN, page 258:
- Obviously, he [Edmund Husserl] assumes that adumbrations exist in consciousness and that they are real parts of the stream of conscious experiences. Otherwise he should have inferred from the thought-experiment of the destruction of the world that in this case consciousness would exist together with a chaotic stream of adumbrations.
使用する際の注意点
Sense 4 is particularly associated with the work of the German philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859–1938).
派生語
- adumbrationism
参照
- ^ “adumbration, n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2011.
Further reading
- “adumbration, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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