different between feeling vs expressive

feeling

English

Etymology

From Middle English felyng, equivalent to feel +? -ing.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?fi?l??/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?fil??/
  • Rhymes: -i?l??

Adjective

feeling (comparative more feeling, superlative most feeling)

  1. Emotionally sensitive.
    Despite the rough voice, the coach is surprisingly feeling.
  2. Expressive of great sensibility; attended by, or evincing, sensibility.
    He made a feeling representation of his wrongs.

Translations

Noun

feeling (plural feelings)

  1. Sensation, particularly through the skin.
    The wool on my arm produced a strange feeling.
  2. Emotion; impression.
    The house gave me a feeling of dread.
  3. (always in the plural) Emotional state or well-being.
    You really hurt my feelings when you said that.
  4. (always in the plural) Emotional attraction or desire.
    Many people still have feelings for their first love.
  5. Intuition.
    He has no feeling for what he can say to somebody in such a fragile emotional condition.
    I've got a funny feeling that this isn't going to work.
    • 1987, The Pogues - Fairytale of New York
      Got on a lucky one
      Came in eighteen to one
      I've got a feeling
      This year's for me and you
  6. An opinion, an attitude.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

feeling

  1. present participle of feel

Derived terms

  • feeling no pain

Anagrams

  • fine leg, fleeing, flingee

French

Etymology

Borrowed from English feeling.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fi.li?/

Noun

feeling m (plural feelings)

  1. instinct, hunch

Anagrams

  • églefin

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from English feeling.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fi.li?/

Noun

feeling m (invariable)

  1. an intense and immediate current of likability that is established between two people; feeling

Serbo-Croatian

Alternative forms

  • filing

Noun

feeling m

  1. feeling, hunch

Synonyms

  • osje?aj

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from English feeling.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?filin/, [?fi.l?n]

Noun

feeling m (plural feelings)

  1. feeling, hunch
  2. spark; attraction; feeling

feeling From the web:

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expressive

English

Etymology

From Middle French expressif

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?k?sp??s?v/
  • Rhymes: -?s?v
  • Hyphenation: ex?pres?sive

Adjective

expressive (comparative more expressive, superlative most expressive)

  1. Effectively conveying thought or feeling.

Antonyms

  • inexpressive
  • unexpressive

Derived terms

  • expressiveness

Related terms

  • expressivity

Translations

Noun

expressive (plural expressives)

  1. (linguistics) Any word or phrase that expresses (that the speaker, writer, or signer has) a certain attitude toward or information about the referent.
    • 2017, Tammi Leann Stout, An investigation of projection and temporal referencein Kaqchikel (dissertation for the University of Texas at Austin):
      Consider the case of expressives, where no prior knowledge of the speaker’s attitudes are required to interpret the utterance. In (43) ["That jerk Alexa keeps making me look bad"], Steve does not need to know (and in fact has no prior knowledge of) anything relating to Siri’s attitudes towards Alexa to interpret that Siri has a negative attitude about Alexa. It is the expressive that jerk that implies the negative attitude.
  2. (linguistics, more narrowly) A word or phrase, belonging to a distinct word class or having distinct morphosyntactic properties, with semantic symbolism (for example, an onomatopoeia), variously considered either a synonym, a hypernym or a hyponym of ideophone.
    • 2004, Nicole Kruspe, A Grammar of Semelai (?ISBN), page 396:
      Cross-linguistically 'expressives' are more commonly termed 'ideophones' [...] Expressives are often cited as a distinctive shared feature of the Austroasiatic language family (Diffloth and Zide 1992; Osada 1992 (Mundari); Svantesson 1983 (Kammu)). [...] I do not make a distinction between expressives and ideophones. [...] I distinguish expressives from onomatopoeic forms, although the two probably overlap.
    • 2007, N. J. Enfield, A Grammar of Lao (?ISBN), page 299
      A native metalinguistic term toongl-toojl covers most of these, capturing a range of phenomena associated with alliterative, sound symbolic, and poetic expression. This chapter describes expressive structures under the headings ideophones, onomatopoeia, four-syllable rhyming expressions, echo formation, and interjections.
      12.1 Ideophones
      The term ideophone is roughly equivalent to the term expressive, as well as other terms mimetic and psychomime.
    • 2015, The Munda Languages (Gregory D. S. Anderson, ?ISBN), page 139:
      The term 'expressive' was suggested by Diffloth (1976:263–264) and adopted by Emeneau (1980:7) in the South Asian context in the following:
      ‘(E)xpressive’ is the most inclusive term for a form class with semantic symbolism and distinct morphosyntactic properties; ‘ideophones’ are a subclass in which the symbolism is phonological; ‘onomaptoetics’ are ideophones in which the reference of the symbolism is acoustic (i.e. imitative of sounds). Since the ideophones may have reference not only to sounds, but to any other objects of sense, including internal feelings as well as external perceptions (sight, taste, smell, etc.), and since the Indo-Aryan/Dravidian items already examined have this very wide type of reference, the broadest term ‘expressives’ seems appropriate.
    • 2017, Sam Gray, Classifications of Mundari Expressives and Other Reduplicated Structures (thesis):
      I examine the valency of expressives, a class of ideophones in Mundari, comparing their behaviors as predicates to those of reduplicated verb forms.

Further reading

  • expressive in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • expressive in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

French

Adjective

expressive

  1. feminine singular of expressif

German

Adjective

expressive

  1. inflection of expressiv:
    1. strong/mixed nominative/accusative feminine singular
    2. strong nominative/accusative plural
    3. weak nominative all-gender singular
    4. weak accusative feminine/neuter singular

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