nature - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- ️Mon Apr 02 2018
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English nature, natur, from Old French nature, from Latin nātūra (“birth, origin, natural constitution or quality”), future participle from perfect passive participle (g)natus (“born”), from deponent verb (g)nasci (“to be born, originate”) + future participle suffix -urus.
Displaced native Middle English erd (“character, nature, disposition”) from Old English eard (compare German Art (“nature, character, kind, type”)); and Middle English kinde, ikinde (“character, disposition, nature”) from Old English ġecynd. More at kind.
- enPR: nā′-chə(r) IPA(key): /ˈneɪ̯.tʃə(ɹ)/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈneɪ̯.tʃə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈneɪ̯.t͡ʃəɹ/
- (Northern England) IPA(key): /ˈnɛː.tʃɐ/
- (General Australian, New Zealand) IPA(key): /ˈnæɪ̯.tʃə/, [ˈnæe̯tʃɐ], [ˈnae̯tʃɐ]
- Rhymes: -eɪtʃə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: na‧ture
nature (countable and uncountable, plural natures)
- (uncountable, often capitalized) The way things are, the totality of all things in the physical universe and their order, especially the physical world in contrast to spiritual realms and flora and fauna as distinct from human conventions, art, and technology.
1667, John Milton, “Book VIII”, in Paradise Lost. […], London: […] [Samuel Simmons], and are to be sold by Peter Parker […]; [a]nd by Robert Boulter […]; [a]nd Matthias Walker, […], →OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books: […], London: Basil Montagu Pickering […], 1873, →OCLC:
I oft admire
How Nature, wise and frugal, could commit
Such disproportions.
1808, Dugald Stewart, Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind[1], pages 315–6:
In the works of nature we find, in many instances, beauty and sublimity involved among circumstances, which are either indifferent, or which obstruct the general effect: and it is only by a train of experiments, that we can separate those circumstances from the rest... Accordingly, the inexperienced artist, when he copies nature, will copy her servilely... and the beauties of his performances will be encumbered with a number of superfluous or disagreeable concomitants. Experience and observation alone can enable him to make this determination: to exhibit the principles of beauty pure and unadulterated, and to form a creation of his own, more faultless, than ever fell under the observation of his senses.
1816, Matthew Harris Jouett, Notes... on Painting with Gilbert Stuart Esqr:
Most persons in striving after effect lose the likeness when they should go together to produce a good effect you must copy Nature: leave Nature for an imaginary effect & you lose all. Nature as Nature cannot be exceeded, and as your object it [is] to copy Nature twere the hight of folly to look at any thing else to produce that copy.
1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter, a Romance, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, →OCLC, [https://archive.org/details/scarletletterrom01hawt/page/186/mode/2up 186–7/mode/1up pages 186–7]:
Nothing was more common, in those days, than to interpret all meteoric appearances, and other natural phenomena, that occurred with less regularity than the rise and set of sun and moon, as so many revelations from a supernatural source... But what shall we say, when an individual discovers a revelation, addressed to himself alone, on the same vast sheet of record! In such a case, it could only be the symptom of a highly disordered mental state, when a man, rendered morbidly self-contemplative by long, intense, and secret pain, had extended his egotism over the whole expanse of nature, until the firmament itself should appear no more than a fitting page for his soul's history and fate.
1891, Oscar Wilde, The Decay of Lying:
Nature has good intentions, of course, but, as Aristotle once said, she cannot carry them out. When I look at a landscape I cannot help seeing all its defects.
1918, Fyodor Dostoevsky, “Notes from Underground”, in Constance Garnett, transl., White Nights and Other Stories[2], pages 58–9:
...they will shout at you, it is no use protesting: it is a case of twice two makes four! Nature does not ask your permission, she has nothing to do with your wishes, and whether you like her laws or dislike them, you are bound to accept her as she is, and consequently all her conclusions. A wall, you see, is a wall... Merciful Heavens! but what do I care for the laws of nature and arithmetic, when, for some reason I dislike those laws and the fact that twice two makes four? Of course I cannot break through the wall by battering my head against it if I really have not the strength to knock it down, but I am not going to be reconciled to it simply because it is a stone wall and I have not the strength.
1928, Christopher Dawson, The Age of the Gods, page 49:
Man was entirely at the mercy of nature—a mere scavenger who eked out a miserable existence as a food-gatherer and an eater of shell-fish.
- 2006 Oct. 1, Dennis Lehane, "Refugees", The Wire, 00:34:06:
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature’s nature.
Moreland: Pitiful.
Freamon: Pitiless. Nature don't care. Nature just is.
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature’s nature.
2012 January, Robert M. Pringle, “How to Be Manipulative”, in American Scientist, volume 100, number 1, page 31:
As in much of biology, the most satisfying truths in ecology derive from manipulative experimentation. Tinker with nature and quantify how it responds.
2015, Alisa Luxenberg, “Printing Plants: The Technology of Nature Printing in Eighteenth-Century Spain”, in Art, Technology, and Nature, page 140:
Gómez Ortega... explicitly ordered them to study only fresh plants, in situ, to draw every part, and 'to copy nature exactly without presuming to correct it or decorate it as some draughtsmen are used to doing, adding colours and ornaments drawn from their imagination'.
- 2017 Sept. 8, Michael Grunwald, "A Requiem for Florida" in Politico Magazine:
- As Hurricane Irma prepares to strike, it's worth remembering that Mother Nature never intended us to live here.
Nature doesn't lie.
Tectonic activity is part of nature, so there's no way to stop earthquakes.
- The particular way someone or something is, especially
- The essential or innate characteristics of a person or thing which will always tend to manifest, especially in contrast to specific contexts, reason, religious duty, upbringing, and personal pretense or effort.
c. 1606 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Macbeth”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, scene iii], page iii:
c. 1606 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Macbeth”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act I, scene v]:
1641, David Fergusson, Scottish proverbs, D4:
1709, Robert Steele, Tatler, number 93:
Men may change their Climate, but they cannot their Nature.
1834, Criminal Law Commission, First Report... on Criminal Law, page 21:
Domestic animals of a base nature and not fit for food, are not the subjects of theft. This rule includes dogs and cats.
1874, John Henry Blunt, Dictionary of Sects..., page 332:
The Monophysites held that the two Natures were so united, that although the 'One Christ' was partly Human and partly Divine, His two Natures became by their union only one Nature.
1869, Horatio Alger Jr., Mark the Match Boy, Ch. 16:
Mark hardly knew whether to believe this or not. He already began to suspect that Roswell was something of a humbug, and though it was not in his nature to form a causeless dislike, he certainly did not feel disposed to like Roswell.
1874, Francis Galton, English Men of Science, page 12:
The phrase ‘nature and nurture’ is a convenient jingle of words, for it separates under two distinct heads the innumerable elements of which personality is composed.
1920, Herman Cyril McNeile, chapter 1, in Bulldog Drummond:
Being by nature of a cheerful disposition, the symptom did not surprise his servant, late private of the same famous regiment, who was laying breakfast in an adjoining room.
1926, Richard Henry Tawney, Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, page 20:
The contrast between nature and grace, between human appetites and interests and religion, is not absolute, but relative.
1961, Barry Crump, Hang on a Minute Mate, page 147:
- 2006 Oct. 1, Dennis Lehane, "Refugees", The Wire, 00:34:06:
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature's nature.
Moreland: Pitiful.
Freamon: Pitiless. Nature don't care. Nature just is.
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature's nature.
- 2015 July 10, Evan Nesterak, "The End of Nature versus Nurture" in The Psych Report:
- Unlike the static conception of nature or nurture, epigenic research demonstrates how genes and environments continuously interact to produce characteristics throughout a lifetime.
It's not in my nature to steal.
You can't help feeling that way. It's human nature.
- The distinguishing characteristic of a person or thing, understood as its general class, sort, type, etc.
- 1626 July 12, Charles I, Instructions:
- For the French, it was impossible for them to serve her in that nature.
1910, Emerson Hough, chapter II, in The Purchase Price: Or The Cause of Compromise, Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, →OCLC:
Carried somehow, somewhither, for some reason, on these surging floods, were these travelers, of errand not wholly obvious to their fellows, yet of such sort as to call into query alike the nature of their errand and their own relations.
1949, George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four, page 56:
And yet, though you could not actually hear what the man was saying, you could not be in any doubt about its general nature.
- 1988 April, Music and Letters, Vol. 69, p. 463:
What was the nature of your relationship with the deceased?
The best medium might be petroleum, liquified gas, or something of that nature.
- 1626 July 12, Charles I, Instructions:
- (UK military, obsolete) Synonym of caliber: the class of a gun.
1828, James Morton Spearman, The British Gunner, page 130:
...One Hundred of each Nature of Case-Shot...
1879, War Office, Manual of Siege and Garrison Artillery Exercises, page 37:
- The essential or innate characteristics of a person or thing which will always tend to manifest, especially in contrast to specific contexts, reason, religious duty, upbringing, and personal pretense or effort.
- The vital functions or strength of someone or something, especially (now dialect) as requiring nourishment or careful maintenance or (medicine) as a force of regeneration without special treatment.
c. 1599–1602 (date written), William Shakespeare, The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke: […] (Second Quarto), London: […] I[ames] R[oberts] for N[icholas] L[ing] […], published 1604, →OCLC, [Act I, scene iii]:
For nature creſſant does not grovve alone / In thevvs and bulkes, but as this temple vvaxes, / The invvard ſervice of the minde and ſoule / Grovves vvide vvithal, […]
- For a human being's vital functions, increasing, do not grow alone / In physical development and bulk, but as this "temple" [i.e., the body] waxes, / The inward operation of the mind and soul / Grows wide with them.
1807, Zebulon Pike, An Account of Expeditions to the Source of the Mississippi..., volume II, page 182:
I returned hungry... and had only snow to supply the calls of nature.
1820, Thomas Tredgold, Elementary Principles of Carpentry, page 165:
The timber... is found to be brittle and effete; or, to use the workman's expression, 'its nature is gone'.
- 1826 April 1, Lancet, p. 32:
- Nature is unable to repair the extensive injury.
1843, George Henry Borrow, The Bible in Spain, volume III, page 47:
The prison allowance will not support nature.
1895, T. Pinnock, Tom Brown's Black Country Annual...:
My iron’s just comin’ to natur’.
1984, William N. Herbert, Sterts & Stobies, page 30:
Hungry-groond, ground credited to be so much enchanted that a person passing over it would faint if they did not use something to support nature.
- A requirement or powerful impulse of the body's physical form, especially
- The need to urinate and defecate.
1701, William Wotton, The History of Rome, page 328:
He withdrew from the Company to ease Nature.
1965, Wole Soyinka, Road, page 26:
The women tell you to stop because they's feeling the call of nature. If you don't stop they pee in your lorry.
- (now chiefly African-American Vernacular) Sexual desire.
1823, Lord Byron, Don Juan, Draft, Canto XV, St. xlix & lii:
She marvelled "What he saw in such a baby
"As that prim, silent, cold Aurora Raby?"
...Why Adeline had this slight prejudice
...For me appears a question far too nice,
Since Adeline was liberal by Nature;
But Nature’s Nature, and has more caprices
Than I have time, or will to take to pieces...
1974 July 25, Daily Telegraph, page 3:
Every time I felt nature for her, she would rub something on her hands and face to take away my nature.
- 2006 Oct. 1, Dennis Lehane, "Refugees", The Wire, 00:34:06:
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature’s nature.
Moreland: Pitiful.
Freamon: Pitiless. Nature don't care. Nature just is.
- Freamon: She too young for you, boy... They get younger, William. Skinnier too. You don't... 's just the nature of things. Age is age, fat is fat, nature’s nature.
- (now chiefly UK regional and African-American Vernacular) Spontaneous love, affection, or reverence, especially between parent and child.
c. 1606 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Macbeth”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act I, scene v]:
1749, John Cleland, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, volume I, page 136:
She had no nature, nor indeed any passion but that of money.
1937, Robinson Jeffers, “Thurso's Landing”, in Selected Poetry[3], page 312:
...I could bear much. I'd not move nor scream
While you wrote the red stripes:
But there's no nature in you...
- The need to urinate and defecate.
- (now rare) A product of the body's physical form, especially semen and vaginal fluids, menstrual fluid, and (obsolete) feces.
- (now rare) A part of the body's physical form, especially (obsolete) the female genitalia.
- 1743 May, William Ellis, Modern Husbandman, No. xiv, p. 137:
- ... offer her the Horse, and... wash her Nature with cold Water ...
- 1743 May, William Ellis, Modern Husbandman, No. xiv, p. 137:
In its primary sense as the material world, its inhabitants, and their order, nature is frequently personified in English conversation and literature, primarily as a cold and indifferent entity or as a wise and loving nurturer (see Mother Nature). In its sense as the essential characteristics of humanity, man's present nature is usually taken in Christian thought as debased by original sin or inherent frailty but amenable to purification through grace; English consideration of human nature frequently continues to maintain a similar focus on resigned acceptance of its failings and distinctions between better/higher and worse/lower natures.
- (innate characteristics): See Thesaurus:essence
- against nature
- all nature
- allow nature to take her course
- allow nature to take its course
- animal nature
- answer the call of nature
- antinature
- appeal to nature
- back to nature
- back-to-nature
- bad nature
- better angels of one's nature
- better angels of someone's nature
- better angles of one's nature
- better nature
- book of nature
- Buddha-nature
- by nature
- call of nature
- child-nature
- course of nature
- crime against nature
- Dame Nature
- debt-for-nature
- debt of nature
- defy the laws of nature
- ease nature
- force of nature
- freak of nature
- from nature
- good nature
- human nature
- in nature
- in the nature of things
- law of nature
- laws of nature
- let nature take her course
- let nature take its course
- light of nature
- Mother Nature
- naturable
- nature beckons
- nature being
- nature-blessed
- nature-bound
- nature boy
- nature calls
- nature conservation
- nature cure
- natured
- nature-deficit disorder
- nature deficit disorder
- nature deity
- naturedly
- nature faker
- nature faking
- nature-favored
- nature film
- nature folk
- nature food
- nature force
- nature-friendly
- nature god/goddess
- nature grass
- naturehood
- nature-identical
- nature kingdom
- natureless
- nature-lover
- nature lover
- nature-mystic
- nature mysticism
- nature myth
- nature-mythology
- nature name
- nature notes
- nature of the beast
- nature-painting
- nature-people
- nature philosophy
- nature poem
- nature poet
- nature poetry
- nature-positive
- nature-power
- nature preserve
- nature printing
- nature ramble
- nature-religion
- nature reserve
- nature sanctuary
- nature's candy
- naturescape
- nature spirit
- nature's scythe
- nature strip
- nature student
- nature study
- nature symbol
- nature symbolism
- nature table
- nature trail
- nature-true
- nature versus nurture
- nature vs nurture
- nature walk
- nature worship
- nature writer
- nature writing
- naturism
- naturist
- naturity
- naturize
- nonnature
- pay the debt of nature
- permit nature to take her course
- permit nature to take its course
- relieve nature
- second nature
- state of nature
- supernature
- supranature
- the wolf may lose his teeth but never his nature
the natural world and its order
- Abkhaz: аԥсабара (apsabara)
- Adyghe: природ (prirod)
- Afrikaans: natuur (af)
- Albanian: mjedis (sq), natyrë (sq) f
- Amharic: ተፈጥሮ (täfäṭro)
- Arabic: طَبِيعَة f (ṭabīʕa)
- Egyptian Arabic: طبيعة f (ṭabīʕa)
- Aragonese: natura f
- Armenian: բնություն (hy) (bnutʻyun)
- Aromanian: fise f
- Assamese: প্ৰকৃতি (prokriti)
- Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܟܝܵܢܵܐ (kyānā)
- Azerbaijani: təbiət (az)
- Bashkir: тәбиғәт (təbiğət)
- Belarusian: прыро́да (be) f (pryróda)
- Bengali: প্রকৃতি (bn) (prokriti)
- Bulgarian: приро́да (bg) f (priróda)
- Burmese: သဘာဝ (my) (sa.bhawa.), စရိုက် (my) (ca.ruik)
- Buryat: байгаали (bajgaali)
- Carpathian Rusyn: приро́да f (pryróda)
- Catalan: natura (ca) f
- Chechen: ӏалам (ˀalam), ширин (širin)
- Chinese:
- Chuvash: ҫутҫанталӑк (śutśant̬alăk)
- Crimean Tatar: tabiat
- Czech: příroda (cs) f
- Danish: natur (da) c
- Dutch: natuur (nl) f
- Eastern Mari: пӱртӱс (pürtüs)
- Esperanto: naturo
- Estonian: loodus (et)
- Finnish: luonto (fi), ympäristö (fi)
- French: nature (fr) f
- Galician: natureza (gl) f, naturanza f, natura (gl) f
- Georgian: ბუნება (buneba), გარემო (garemo)
- German: Natur (de) f
- Gothic: 𐍅𐌹𐍃𐍄𐍃 f (wists)
- Greek: φύση (el) f (fýsi)
- Ancient: φύσις f (phúsis)
- Gujarati: પ્રકૃતિ (prakŕti), કુદરત (kudrat)
- Haitian Creole: nati
- Hebrew: טֶבַע (he) m (téva)
- Hindi: प्रकृति (hi) f (prakŕti), फ़ितरत (hi) f (fitrat), फितरत (hi) f (phitrat), तबीयत (hi) f (tabīyat), क़ुदरत f (qudrat), कुदरत (hi) f (kudrat), निसर्ग (hi) m (nisarg)
- Hungarian: természet (hu)
- Icelandic: náttúra (is) f, umhverfi (is) n
- Ido: naturo (io)
- Indonesian: alam (id), kodrat (id)
- Irish: nádúr, an dúlra, dúlra
- Italian: natura (it) f
- Japanese: 自然 (ja) (しぜん, shizen)
- Kabardian: природэ (kbd) (prirodɛ)
- Kalmyk: йиртмҗ (yirtmj)
- Kannada: ನಿಸರ್ಗ (kn) (nisarga), ಪ್ರಕೃತಿ (kn) (prakṛti)
- Kazakh: табиғат (kk) (tabiğat)
- Khmer: ធម្មជាតិ (thŏəmmĕəʼciət)
- Korean: 자연(自然) (ko) (jayeon)
- Kurdish:
- Kyrgyz: жаратылыш (ky) (jaratılış), табият (ky) (tabiyat)
- Lao: ທຳມະຊາດ (lo) (tham ma sāt)
- Latin: nātūra f
- Latvian: vide f, daba (lv) f
- Lezgi: тӏебиат (ṭebiat)
- Lithuanian: gamta (lt) f
- Low German: natuur (nds) f
- Lü: ᦉᦳᧄᦘᦱᧇ (ṡumphaab)
- Macedonian: природа (mk) f (priroda)
- Malay: alam semulajadi, semulajadi, tabiat (ms), alam (ms)
- Malayalam: പ്രകൃതി (ml) (prakr̥ti)
- Maori: ao tūroa, aotūroa
- Marathi: निसर्ग (nisarga)
- Middle Persian: 𐭰𐭩𐭧𐭫 (cyḥl)
- Moksha: перьфпяль (peŕfpäľ)
- Mongolian:
- Navajo: tłʼóoʼdi
- Nepali: प्रकृति (ne) (prakr̥ti)
- Norwegian:
- Occitan: natura (oc) f
- Odia: ପ୍ରକୃତି (or) (prakruti)
- Old English: ġecynd f, wist f
- Ossetian: ӕрдз (ærʒ)
- Ottoman Turkish: طبیعت (tabi'at)
- Pashto: طبيعت (ps) m (tabi'at)
- Persian:
- Polish: natura (pl) f, przyroda (pl) f
- Portuguese: natureza (pt) f
- Punjabi:
- Quechua: sallqa
- Romanian: natură (ro) f
- Russian: приро́да (ru) f (priróda)
- Sanskrit: प्रकृति (sa) m (prakṛti)
- Scottish Gaelic: nàdar m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Sinhalese: සොබාදහම (sobādahama)
- Slovak: príroda f
- Spanish: naturaleza (es) f, natura (es) f (archaic or poetic)
- Swahili: mazingira (sw) class ma
- Swedish: natur (sv) c
- Tagalog: kalikasan (tl)
- Tajik: табиат (tg) (tabiat)
- Tamil: இயற்கை (ta) (iyaṟkai)
- Tatar: табигать (tt) (tabigat’)
- Telugu: ప్రకృతి (te) (prakr̥ti)
- Thai: ธรรมชาติ (th) (tam-má-châat)
- Tibetan: རང་བྱུང (rang byung)
- Tigrinya: ተፈጥሮ (täfäṭro)
- Turkish: tabiat (tr), doğa (tr)
- Turkmen: tebigat
- Udmurt: инкуазь (inkuaź)
- Ukrainian: приро́да (uk) f (pryróda)
- Urdu: فِطْرَت f (fitrat), طَبِیعَت f (tabī'at), قُدْرَت f (qudrat)
- Uyghur: تەبىئەت (tebi'et)
- Uzbek: tabiat (uz)
- Vietnamese: ngoài trời (vi), tự nhiên (vi), nguyên thủy (vi), tạo hóa (vi)
- Volapük: nat (vo)
- Welsh: anian f
- Yakut: айылҕа (ayılğa)
- Yiddish: נאַטור f (natur), סבֿיבֿה f (svive)
- Zhuang: mbwnnamh
essential characteristics
- Afrikaans: natuur (af)
- Albanian: natyrë (sq) f
- Aragonese: natura f
- Armenian: էություն (hy) (ēutʻyun), բնույթ (hy) (bnuytʻ), բնություն (hy) (bnutʻyun)
- Azerbaijani: səciyyə, xüsusiyyət (az), xarakter
- Belarusian: прыро́да (be) f (pryróda), су́тнасць f (sútnascʹ), су́тнасьць f (sútnasʹcʹ)
- Bulgarian: съ́щност (bg) f (sǎ́štnost), приро́да (bg) f (priróda)
- Burmese: စရိုက် (my) (ca.ruik)
- Catalan: natura (ca) f, natural (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Czech: povaha (cs) f
- Danish: natur (da) c
- Dutch: aard (nl) f
- Esperanto: naturo
- Estonian: loomus (et), natuur
- Faroese: náttúra f
- Finnish: luonne (fi), luonto (fi)
- French: nature (fr) f
- Galician: natureza (gl) f, natural (gl) m
- Georgian: ბუნება (buneba)
- German: Natur (de) f, Art (de) f
- Gothic: 𐍅𐌹𐍃𐍄𐍃 f (wists)
- Greek: φύση (el) f (fýsi)
- Ancient: φύσις f (phúsis)
- Hebrew: טֶבַע (he) m (téva)
- Hindi: स्वभाव (hi) (svabhāv), फ़ितरत (hi) f (fitrat), फितरत (hi) f (phitrat), ज़ात (hi) f (zāt)
- Hungarian: természet (hu), jelleg (hu)
- Icelandic: náttúra (is) f, eðli n
- Ido: naturo (io)
- Irish: dúchas m
- Italian: natura (it) f
- Japanese: 性質 (ja) (せいしつ, seishitsu)
- Khmer: ធម្មជាតិ (thŏəmmĕəʼciət)
- Korean: 성질(性質) (ko) (seongjil)
- Kurdish:
- Latin: natura f, indoles f
- Latvian: daba (lv) f
- Low German: natuur (nds) f
- Macedonian: природа (mk) f (priroda), ќуд f (ḱud), нарав m (narav), суштина f (suština)
- Middle Persian: 𐭰𐭩𐭧𐭫 (cyḥl)
- Nogai: табиат (tabiat)
- Norwegian:
- Old English: ġecynd f, wist f
- Old Norse: eðli n
- Old Occitan: natura
- Ottoman Turkish: طبیعت (tabiʼat), طبع (tabʼ)
- Persian:
- Polish: natura (pl) f, charakter (pl) m, specyfika (pl) f
- Portuguese: natureza (pt) f
- Romanian: natură (ro) f
- Russian: приро́да (ru) f (priróda), нату́ра (ru) f (natúra), су́щность (ru) f (súščnostʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: gnè f, nàdar m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: príroda f, povaha f
- Slovene: narava (sl) f
- Spanish: naturaleza (es) f
- Swedish: natur (sv) c
- Tajik: табиат (tg) (tabiat)
- Telugu: స్వభావము (te) (svabhāvamu)
- Ukrainian: приро́да (uk) f (pryróda), су́тність f (sútnistʹ)
- Urdu: فِطْرَت f (fitrat)
- Vietnamese: tính (vi), bản chất (vi), bản tính (vi)
- Volapük: please add this translation if you can
- Yiddish: טבֿע f (teyve), נאַטור f (natur)
Translations to be checked
- Bengali: (please verify) প্রকৃতি (bn) (prokriti)
- Estonian: (please verify) loodus (et)
- Hebrew: (please verify) יְקוּם (he) m (yekum)
- Indonesian: (please verify) ilmu (id)
- Korean: (please verify) 나름 (ko) (nareum)
- Lithuanian: (please verify) gamta (lt)
- Ossetian: (please verify) ӕрдз (ærʒ)
- Sundanese: (please verify) élmu (su)
- Thai: (please verify) ศาสตร์ (th) (sàat)
nature (third-person singular simple present natures, present participle naturing, simple past and past participle natured)
- “nature, n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021.
- “nature”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- nature in Keywords for Today: A 21st Century Vocabulary, edited by The Keywords Project, Colin MacCabe, Holly Yanacek, 2018.
- "nature" in Raymond Williams, Keywords (revised), 1983, Fontana Press, page 219.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “nature”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- “nature”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
nature
Inherited from Middle French nature, Old French nature, borrowed from Latin nātūra.
nature f (plural natures)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4a/Brioche.jpg/220px-Brioche.jpg)
nature (plural natures)
- plain, unseasoned
Une brioche nature ou sucrée ?
- A plain or sweet brioche?
File-moi un yaourt nature s’il te plait.
- Give me a plain yogurt, please.
- condomless, bareback, raw dog, natural (see Thesaurus:condomless)
Une fellation nature.
- A natural blowjob.
- “nature”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
nature f
nature (invariable)
Borrowed from Old French nature, from Latin nātūra.
nature f
- nature, force of nature
- laws of nature, natural order
- nature, innate characteristics
- kind, sort
- origin
- sexual fertility, sex drive
This noun needs an inflection-table template.
- “nature”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
- Verwijs, E., Verdam, J. (1885–1929) “nature”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, →ISBN
Borrowed from Old French nature, from Latin nātūra.
nature (plural natures)
- the Universe, existence, creation
- nature, the natural world
- natural abilities
- natural inevitability, nature (as opposed to nurture)
- natural morals, natural law
- natural needs or requirements
- nature, state, condition
- species, kind, type
- Nature (allegory)
- bodily fluids
1387–1400, Geoffrey Chaucer, “The Parsons Tale”, in The Canterbury Tales, [Westminster: William Caxton, published 1478], →OCLC; republished in [William Thynne], editor, The Workes of Geffray Chaucer Newlye Printed, […], [London]: […] [Richard Grafton for] Iohn Reynes […], 1542, →OCLC:
- “nātūr(e, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-04-02.
Inherited from Old French nature, borrowed from Latin nātūra.
nature f (plural natures)
- French: nature
Learned borrowing from Latin nātūra.
nature oblique singular, f (oblique plural natures, nominative singular nature, nominative plural natures)
- nature (natural world; nonhuman world)
c. 1170, Chrétien de Troyes, Érec et Énide:
De cesti tesmoingne Nature,
Qu'onques si bele creature
Ne fu veüe an tot le monde.- Nature can testify
That never such a beautiful creature
Was seen in the whole world
- Nature can testify
- nature (character; qualities)
- Middle French: nature
- French: nature
- → Middle Dutch: nature (see there for further descendants)
- → Middle English: nature (see there for further descendants)
- English: nature
nature
- inflection of naturar: