asthenia
English
WOTD – 22 September 2007
Alternative forms
- astheny (dated)
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ἀσθένεια (asthéneia), from ἀσθενής (asthenḗs, “sick, weak”), from ἀ- (a-, “not, un-”) + σθένος (sthénos, “strength”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /æsˈθi.ni.ə/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /æsˈθiː.nɪə/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -iːniə
Noun
asthenia (countable and uncountable, plural asthenias)
- (medicine) Weakness; loss of strength.
- 1914, Boris Sidis, The Foundations of Normal and Abnormal Psychology:
- The savage gets a headache when his thought is forced to flow in a stream of representation. In the imbecile, in the idiot we find the same thing manifested. They can only think in concrete sensory terms. In mental asthenia which approaches the state of the higher stages of imbecility and also in secondary dementia, states consequent on psychic degeneration, we find the same truth illustrated. The patient's mental activity falls many stages nearer to the level of presentative life. It is only in the higher forms of psychic life that representative elements become free, independent, and are freely and easily associated and dissociated.
- (figurative) weakness
- 1927, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The War Chief:
- You see nothing that might even remotely suggest life, beyond the solitary brave watering the ponies below you; but that is because the asthenia of civilization has left you half blind as well as half deaf, for where you see nothing and hear nothing Geronimo is conscious of life, movement and sound-of rodents, reptiles and birds awaiting, quiescent, the lessening heat of dusk.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
loss of strength
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Anagrams
- sheitaan