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LIBIDINAL TYPES

  • Libidinal Types
  • Freud's short article Libidinal types was published in German in 1931 as Über libidinöse Typen. English translations followed in 1932, both as the lead

    Libidinal Types

    Libidinal_Types

  • Libidinal Economy
  • 1974 book by Jean-François Lyotard

    Libidinal Economy (French: Économie Libidinale) is a 1974 book by French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard. The book was composed following the ideological

    Libidinal Economy

    Libidinal_Economy

  • Sigmund Freud bibliography
  • Civilization and Its Discontents (German: Das Unbehagen in der Kultur) 1931 Libidinal Types 1931 Female Sexuality 1932 The Acquisition of Control Over Fire 1933

    Sigmund Freud bibliography

    Sigmund_Freud_bibliography

  • Cathexis
  • Psychoanalytic concept of allocation of emotional energy

    quasi-physical terms,[need quotation to verify] representing frustration of libidinal desires, for example, as a blockage of (cathected) energies which would

    Cathexis

    Cathexis

  • The Psychoanalytic Quarterly
  • Academic journal

    work and provide an outlet for it. The first issue's lead article was Libidinal Types by Sigmund Freud, one of three articles by Freud translated by Edith

    The Psychoanalytic Quarterly

    The_Psychoanalytic_Quarterly

  • Anti-Oedipus
  • 1972 book by Deleuze and Guattari

    schizoanalysis: Every unconscious libidinal investment is social and bears upon a socio-historical field. Unconscious libidinal investments of group or desire

    Anti-Oedipus

    Anti-Oedipus

  • Ego psychology
  • School of psychoanalysis

    focus on the ego's normal and pathological development, its management of libidinal and aggressive impulses, and its adaptation to reality. Sigmund Freud

    Ego psychology

    Ego_psychology

  • Mukbang
  • Online broadcast involving eating

    oscillate between excitement and collapse, which corresponds to the classic libidinal cycles. Viewers gain sensory satisfaction through indirect excessive consumption

    Mukbang

    Mukbang

    Mukbang

  • Mirror stage
  • Psychoanalytic concept

    initiation into what Jacques Lacan would call the "mirror stage" entails a "libidinal dynamism" caused by the young child's identification with its own image

    Mirror stage

    Mirror stage

    Mirror_stage

  • Eros and Civilization
  • 1955 book by Herbert Marcuse

    social critic Herbert Marcuse. Eros effect Eros (Freud) Freudo-Marxism Libidinal Economy Books Abramson, Jeffrey B. (1986). Liberation and Its Limits:

    Eros and Civilization

    Eros and Civilization

    Eros_and_Civilization

  • Charles Fourier
  • French utopian socialist and philosopher (1772–1837)

    any other social critic of his time." For Herbert Marcuse "The idea of libidinal work relations in a developed industrial society finds little support

    Charles Fourier

    Charles Fourier

    Charles_Fourier

  • Wuthering Heights
  • 1847 novel by Emily Brontë

    original (PDF) on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2010. Krause, Paul (2022). "Libidinal Heights: Love, Lust, and Redemption in Emily Brontë's "Wuthering Heights""

    Wuthering Heights

    Wuthering Heights

    Wuthering_Heights

  • Fanged Noumena
  • 2011 anthology by Nick Land

    Land also referred to this philosophical interest during this period as "libidinal materialism". Responding to the assertions made in the essay, Brassier

    Fanged Noumena

    Fanged_Noumena

  • The Virgin Suicides
  • 1993 novel by Jeffrey Eugenides

    potential cause of Cecilia's suicide attempt was the suppression of her libidinal urges. The parents allow the girls to throw a chaperoned party at their

    The Virgin Suicides

    The_Virgin_Suicides

  • Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego
  • 1921 book by Sigmund Freud

    his theory of instincts and believes that masses are held together by libidinal bonds. Each individual in the mass acts on impulses of love that are diverted

    Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego

    Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego

    Group_Psychology_and_the_Analysis_of_the_Ego

  • Immature personality disorder
  • Personality disorder

    anxiety.[better source needed] They fail to integrate the aggressive and libidinal factors at play in other people, and thus are not able to parse their

    Immature personality disorder

    Immature_personality_disorder

  • Love at first sight
  • Falling in long-lasting love with someone on first sight

    assumed love. Hillman and Phillips describe it as a desire to express the libidinal attraction of addictive love,[not specific enough to verify] inspired

    Love at first sight

    Love_at_first_sight

  • Civilization and Its Discontents
  • 1930 book by Sigmund Freud

    Freud draws a key analogy between the development of civilization and libidinal development in the individual, which allows Freud to speak of civilization

    Civilization and Its Discontents

    Civilization and Its Discontents

    Civilization_and_Its_Discontents

  • Freud's psychoanalytic theories
  • Look to unconscious drives to explain human behavior

    according to Freud, to decrease narcissism in society's members, by creating libidinal ties with others, by placing everyone at an equal level. The commonality

    Freud's psychoanalytic theories

    Freud's psychoanalytic theories

    Freud's_psychoanalytic_theories

  • Schizoanalysis
  • Set of theories

    [T]he goal of schizoanalysis: to analyze the specific nature of the libidinal investments in the economic and political spheres, and thereby show how

    Schizoanalysis

    Schizoanalysis

  • Of Grammatology
  • 1967 book by Jacques Derrida

    Speculum of the Other Woman (1974), the philosopher Jean-François Lyotard's Libidinal Economy (1974), and the sociologist Jean Baudrillard's Symbolic Exchange

    Of Grammatology

    Of_Grammatology

  • The Metamorphosis
  • 1915 novella by Franz Kafka

    made up of one passive, rather austere, person and another active, more libidinal, person. The appearance of figures with such almost irreconcilable personalities

    The Metamorphosis

    The Metamorphosis

    The_Metamorphosis

  • Self-destructive behavior
  • Behaviours that are harmful to the individual engaging in them

    Pickrem, Faye (January 1, 2017), "Disembodying Desire: Ontological Fantasy, Libidinal Anxiety and the Erotics of Renunciation in May Sinclair", May Sinclair

    Self-destructive behavior

    Self-destructive behavior

    Self-destructive_behavior

  • Regression (psychology)
  • Mental defence mechanism in psychoanalysis

    centrally formative elements in the creation of a neurosis. Arguing that "the libidinal function goes through a lengthy development", he assumed that "a development

    Regression (psychology)

    Regression_(psychology)

  • Neurasthenia
  • Psychological term

    interruptus as well as in cases of masturbation, there was "an insufficient libidinal discharge" that had a poisoning effect on the organism, in other words

    Neurasthenia

    Neurasthenia

  • Electra complex
  • Jungian psychological concept

    discovering that she — the daughter — has no penis, she then transfers her libidinal desire (sexual attachment) to her father and increases sexual competition

    Electra complex

    Electra complex

    Electra_complex

  • Archetype
  • Concept in psychology, literature, philosophy

    meant them. In Jung's psychological framework, archetypes are innate, libidinally collective schemas, universal prototypes for idea-sensory impression

    Archetype

    Archetype

  • Mao suit
  • Type of Chinese clothing

    ISBN 978-0-313-30876-5. OCLC 610665365. Johansson, Perry (2015). The libidinal economy of China: gender, nationalism, and consumer culture. Lexington

    Mao suit

    Mao suit

    Mao_suit

  • Nominalism
  • Philosophy emphasizing names and labels

    a "libidinal nominalism." He argues that the insistence on the individual will that has emerged in medieval nominalism evolves into a "libidinal nominalism"

    Nominalism

    Nominalism

    Nominalism

  • Oedipus complex
  • Idea in psychoanalysis

    parent and child relationship; the parents become objects of infantile libidinal energy. The boy directs his libido (psychic energy) toward his mother

    Oedipus complex

    Oedipus complex

    Oedipus_complex

  • History of depression
  • of affection through an unconscious, narcissistic process called the libidinal cathexis of the ego. Such loss results in severe melancholic symptoms

    History of depression

    History_of_depression

  • Portnoy's Complaint
  • 1969 novel by Philip Roth

    inability to enjoy the fruits of his sexual adventures even as his extreme libidinal urges force him to seek release in ever more creative (and, in his mind

    Portnoy's Complaint

    Portnoy's Complaint

    Portnoy's_Complaint

  • History of conversion therapy
  • heterosexual as a result of treatment, but who managed to achieve a "positive libidinal relationship" with another woman. Deutsch indicated that she would have

    History of conversion therapy

    History_of_conversion_therapy

  • Laura Mulvey
  • British feminist film theorist (born 1941)

    As regards camera work, the camera films from the optical as well as libidinal point of view of the male character, contributing to the spectator’s identification

    Laura Mulvey

    Laura Mulvey

    Laura_Mulvey

  • Discourse, Figure
  • 1971 book by Jean-François Lyotard

    Grant 1993, p. xx. Books Grant, Iain Hamilton (1993). "Introduction". Libidinal Economy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20728-2. Schrift

    Discourse, Figure

    Discourse,_Figure

  • The Mass Psychology of Fascism
  • 1933 book by Wilhelm Reich

    unconscious psychology of emotions, traumatic experiences, fantasies, libidinal economies, and so on, and Nazi political ideology and practice exacerbated

    The Mass Psychology of Fascism

    The_Mass_Psychology_of_Fascism

  • Narcissistic leadership
  • Leadership style

    unassailable libidinal position which we ourselves have since abandoned." According to the book Narcissism: Behind the Mask, there are four basic types of leader

    Narcissistic leadership

    Narcissistic_leadership

  • Grief
  • Response to loss in humans and other animals

    to solve this puzzle. Sigmund Freud argued that grief is a process of libidinal reinvestment. The griever must, Freud argued, disinvest from the deceased

    Grief

    Grief

    Grief

  • Maternal deprivation
  • Work on the effects of separating infants and young children from their mother

    to fantasies generated from internal conflict between aggressive and libidinal drives, rather than to events in the external world. (His breach with

    Maternal deprivation

    Maternal deprivation

    Maternal_deprivation

  • Anti-consumerism
  • Sociopolitical ideology

    destruction of psychic and collective individuation. The diversion of libidinal energy toward the consumption of consumer products, he argues, results

    Anti-consumerism

    Anti-consumerism

  • Gynoid
  • Humanoid robot resembling a woman

    Gynoids are frames that enable us to desire differently, by accommodating libidinal-investments in male lack. Foster, Thomas (2005). The souls of cyberfolk:

    Gynoid

    Gynoid

    Gynoid

  • Narcissism
  • Excessive preoccupation with oneself

    Introduction". For Freud, narcissism refers to the individual's direction of libidinal energy toward themselves rather than objects and others. He postulated

    Narcissism

    Narcissism

    Narcissism

  • Angels (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
  • Entities from Neon Genesis Evangelion

    mythological Lilith represents "the Other Side", a dark world in which deep libidinal and unconscious desires are not controlled, interpreted Neon Genesis Evangelion

    Angels (Neon Genesis Evangelion)

    Angels_(Neon_Genesis_Evangelion)

  • Dreams in analytical psychology
  • the subject level, giving him/her the opportunity to reappropriate the libidinal energy contained in the projections he/she has made onto the object. The

    Dreams in analytical psychology

    Dreams in analytical psychology

    Dreams_in_analytical_psychology

  • Romance
  • Love focused on feelings

    ethical and aesthetic attainment, sexual love cannot be reduced to mere libidinal impulse; love pertains to courtesy and courtship but is not necessarily

    Romance

    Romance

    Romance

  • List of literary movements
  • London Nights (1895)". Economies of Desire at the Victorian Fin de Siècle: Libidinal Lives: 62–82. Huneker, James (1909). Egoists, a Book of Supermen: Stendhal

    List of literary movements

    List_of_literary_movements

  • Attachment theory
  • Psychological ethological theory

    Guilford Press. pp. 3–24. ISBN 978-1-4625-2529-4. Fraiberg S (1969). "Libidinal object constancy and mental representation". The Psychoanalytic Study

    Attachment theory

    Attachment theory

    Attachment_theory

  • Identification (psychology)
  • Psychological process

    an object; secondly, in a regressive way it becomes a substitute for a libidinal object-tie...and thirdly, it may arise with any new perception of a common

    Identification (psychology)

    Identification_(psychology)

  • Delayed gratification
  • Resistance of an immediate reward in return for a greater reward later

    delay gratification as a person's efforts to overcome the instinctive, libidinal drive of the id. According to classic psychoanalytic theory, a person's

    Delayed gratification

    Delayed gratification

    Delayed_gratification

  • Major depressive disorder
  • Mood disorder

    of affection through an unconscious, narcissistic process called the libidinal cathexis of the ego. Such loss results in severe melancholic symptoms

    Major depressive disorder

    Major depressive disorder

    Major_depressive_disorder

  • The Ego and the Id
  • Book by Sigmund Freud

    Eros.” This process of desexualization occurs, according to Freud, when libidinal energy passes from the id (its origin) into the ego—which (through a process

    The Ego and the Id

    The_Ego_and_the_Id

  • History of narcissism
  • common component in the human psyche. He argued that narcissism "is the libidinal complement to the egoism of the instinct of self-preservation." He referred

    History of narcissism

    History_of_narcissism

  • Psychoanalysis
  • Set of therapeutic techniques established by Sigmund Freud

    intervention and the human desire for reunification present aspects of the same libidinal energy: the death drive is rooted in forces that break down and dissolve

    Psychoanalysis

    Psychoanalysis

  • Thomas Pynchon
  • American novelist (born 1937)

    panorama of European politics, American entropy, industrial history, and libidinal panic which leaves a chaotic whirl of fractal patterns in the reader's

    Thomas Pynchon

    Thomas Pynchon

    Thomas_Pynchon

  • Sexuality in ancient Rome
  • Attitudes and behaviors towards sex in ancient Rome

    (Brill, 1980), p. 155. Juvenal, Satire 6.60ff.; Erik Gunderson, "The Libidinal Rhetoric of Satire," in The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire (Cambridge

    Sexuality in ancient Rome

    Sexuality in ancient Rome

    Sexuality_in_ancient_Rome

  • Courtly love
  • Medieval European literary conception of love

    ethical and aesthetic attainment, sexual love cannot be reduced to mere libidinal impulse; love pertains to courtesy and courtship but is not necessarily

    Courtly love

    Courtly love

    Courtly_love

  • Stanisław Lem's fictitious criticism of nonexistent books
  • Faux reviews of fictional books

    eschatological forms of Christian pageant - drawing attention to the libidinal aspect of the Holocaust and to the excess of the spectacle written into

    Stanisław Lem's fictitious criticism of nonexistent books

    Stanisław Lem's fictitious criticism of nonexistent books

    Stanisław_Lem's_fictitious_criticism_of_nonexistent_books

  • Jewish views on homosexuality
  • inclination towards a particular form of physical relationship in which the libidinal gratification is sought with members of one's own gender." He wrote that

    Jewish views on homosexuality

    Jewish views on homosexuality

    Jewish_views_on_homosexuality

  • Synchronicity
  • Jungian concept of the meaningfulness of acausal coincidences

    Psychological causality, as understood in Freudian theory, by which repressed libidinal energy is discharged across the psyche in response to principles of cause

    Synchronicity

    Synchronicity

    Synchronicity

  • Selma Fraiberg
  • American child psychologist (1918–1981)

    Orthopsychiatry. 52 (1): 180–181. doi:10.1037/h0098913. Fraiberg, Selma (1969). "Libidinal Object Constancy and Mental Representation". The Psychoanalytic Study

    Selma Fraiberg

    Selma_Fraiberg

  • Harry Guntrip
  • British psychoanalyst and Congregationalist minister (1901–1975)

    cut off from the world of outer reality in an emotional sense. All this libidinal desire and striving is directed inward toward internal objects and he

    Harry Guntrip

    Harry_Guntrip

  • Welcome to the Desert of the Real
  • 2002 philosophy book by Slavoj Žižek

    justified in their violent actions. In fact, the attacks were already libidinally invested by a series of Hollywood catastrophe films, showing that it

    Welcome to the Desert of the Real

    Welcome_to_the_Desert_of_the_Real

  • Homosexuality in ancient Rome
  • Sexuality in ancient Rome

    (Bolchazy-Carducci, 1995), p. 78. Juvenal, Satire 6.36–37; Erik Gunderson, "The Libidinal Rhetoric of Satire," in The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire (Cambridge

    Homosexuality in ancient Rome

    Homosexuality in ancient Rome

    Homosexuality_in_ancient_Rome

  • Neuropsychoanalysis
  • Synthesis of psychoanalysis and modern neuroscience

    referred to as perspectivism. That is, our souls are monistic from their libidinal energy. We as living beings consist of matter - Cells, their superstructuring

    Neuropsychoanalysis

    Neuropsychoanalysis

    Neuropsychoanalysis

  • Draft evasion
  • Intentional non-compliance with military conscription

    surprise is that the dodgers] have little interest in romantic love. Their libidinal hyperactivity accords with [Herbert] Marcuse's belief in the liberatory

    Draft evasion

    Draft_evasion

  • Dispositif
  • Philosophical term

    Gestell (enframing), Jean-François Lyotard's early 1970s studies on the Libidinal Economy, Georges Canguilhem's notion of "social normativity" (1966) and

    Dispositif

    Dispositif

  • Polygyny
  • Mating system in which the male partner may have multiple partners

    wealthy men and those that were adjunct to an aristocracy, although such libidinal perceptions were at times discarded in favor of seeing polygyny as a factor

    Polygyny

    Polygyny

    Polygyny

  • Ecofascism
  • Authoritarian environmentalist ideology

    the original on 20 July 2024. Hughes, Brian (2018). "Reich vs. Reich: Libidinal Economy and the Hardline Subculture". Parasol: Journal of the Centre for

    Ecofascism

    Ecofascism

    Ecofascism

  • Totem and Taboo
  • 1913 book by Sigmund Freud

    phase associated with a primitive understanding of the universe and early libidinal development. A belief in magic and sorcery derives from an overvaluation

    Totem and Taboo

    Totem and Taboo

    Totem_and_Taboo

  • Dead Europe (novel)
  • 2005 novel by Christos Tsiolkas

    "sees other people as objects, resources or props in the life of the libidinal individual." The novel was originally conceived a non-fiction project

    Dead Europe (novel)

    Dead_Europe_(novel)

  • Weaving a Story 2: oral stage
  • Episode of Neon Genesis Evangelion

    and the term cathexis is named, which in Freudian psychology indicates libidinal investment toward an object. In the process, Shinji hers his mother Yui

    Weaving a Story 2: oral stage

    Weaving_a_Story_2:_oral_stage

  • The Nutcracker and the Mouse King
  • 1816 story by E. T. A. Hoffmann

    central to infants attachment to the one who feeds it, is a child's first libidinal instinct. "Had Hoffmann not been a proto-Freudian, he perhaps would have

    The Nutcracker and the Mouse King

    The Nutcracker and the Mouse King

    The_Nutcracker_and_the_Mouse_King

  • Orgastic potency
  • Concept coined by Austrian psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich

    he experimentally verified the existence of what he first termed the "libidinal economy". The report summarised two years of research into the reaction

    Orgastic potency

    Orgastic_potency

  • History of attachment theory
  • History of the interpersonal relationship framework

    to motivation learned through feeding experiences and gratification of libidinal drives. In the 1930s, the British developmentalist Ian Suttie put forward

    History of attachment theory

    History of attachment theory

    History_of_attachment_theory

  • The Real
  • Philosophical category of inexpressible reality

    libidinal hysteria breaches the paranoid-schizoid position of masculine fanaticism by attempting to make the Real appear, whereas feminine libidinal hysteria

    The Real

    The_Real

  • The Seven Ages (film)
  • 1905 American silent comedy film

    at being 'grown-up' (...). Evoking as they do not only the children's libidinal pleasure in one another (if that is what it is) but also the child's sexual

    The Seven Ages (film)

    The Seven Ages (film)

    The_Seven_Ages_(film)

  • Kissed
  • 1996 Canadian film

    spiritual ways" and that the light/darkness palette "symbolize[s] the story's libidinal and spiritual forces". Similarly, Paakspuu said the voice-over was used

    Kissed

    Kissed

  • Rafael E. López-Corvo
  • Venezuelan-Canadian physician and psychiatrist

    is a Woman, Jason Aronson, New York. (A psychological essay about the libidinal aspects of femininity), 1996 (Translated to Spanish: Dios es una Mujer

    Rafael E. López-Corvo

    Rafael E. López-Corvo

    Rafael_E._López-Corvo

  • Timeline of 1960s counterculture
  • "the adult magazine that wormed its way into the kinkier recesses of the libidinal subconscious and, arguably, did more to liberate puritan America from

    Timeline of 1960s counterculture

    Timeline_of_1960s_counterculture

  • The General in His Labyrinth
  • 1989 novel by Gabriel García Márquez

    that the phantom of the lost object of modernity may cease to rule the libidinal economy of Spanish American cultural discourse and historical life". García

    The General in His Labyrinth

    The_General_in_His_Labyrinth

  • Strange Brother
  • 1931 book by Blair Niles

    York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-12765-3. Boone, Joseph Allen (1998). Libidinal Currents: Sexuality and the Shaping of Modernism (1st ed.). Chicago, IL:

    Strange Brother

    Strange_Brother

  • John O'Neill (sociologist)
  • Canadian sociologist (1933–2022)

    body politic – articulated at the levels of the biological, productive, libidinal, and civic bodies – derives from the Christian, medieval, and Renaissance

    John O'Neill (sociologist)

    John O'Neill (sociologist)

    John_O'Neill_(sociologist)

  • Michael S. Porder
  • American psychoanalyst (1933–2021)

    not qualitatively. These borderlines shared with neurotics the same libidinal and aggressive, object-relational issues, the same difficulties with reality

    Michael S. Porder

    Michael S. Porder

    Michael_S._Porder

  • King Lear (1987 film)
  • 1987 film directed by Jean-Luc Godard

    Knabb. Retrieved January 29, 2017. Scovell, Adam (January 25, 2016). "Libidinal Circuits in 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her (1967) – Jean-Luc Godard".

    King Lear (1987 film)

    King_Lear_(1987_film)

  • Conceptual writing
  • Style of writing

    of previous theory): "This would mean falling into the messy muck of libidinal flows (or the Internet or ‘whatever’) without leaving a trace of authorship

    Conceptual writing

    Conceptual_writing

  • Mesemu zoku
  • 1940 Japanese Surrealist photobook edited by Yoshio Shimozato

    resemblance to genitalia, creating a tension between scientific display and libidinal suggestion. For that reason, Mesemu zoku has been interpreted not simply

    Mesemu zoku

    Mesemu_zoku

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing LIBIDINAL TYPES

LIBIDINAL TYPES

AI search references containing LIBIDINAL TYPES

LIBIDINAL TYPES

  • Libitina
  • Girl/Female

    Latin

    Libitina

    Protectress of the dead.

    Libitina

  • Banmala
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Banmala

    A garland of types of flowers

    Banmala

  • Banmala
  • Girl/Female

    Assamese, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu

    Banmala

    A Garland of 5 Types of Flowers

    Banmala

  • Banmala | பநமாலா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Banmala | பநமாலா

    A garland of types of flowers

    Banmala | பநமாலா

  • Navadha
  • Girl/Female

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada

    Navadha

    Nine Types of Worship in Jainism

    Navadha

  • Trirav
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi

    Trirav

    Making Three Types of Sound

    Trirav

  • Navarasan
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Tamil

    Navarasan

    New Taste; Nine Types of Reactions

    Navarasan

  • Navaratna
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Navaratna

    Nine Types of Gems

    Navaratna

  • Chaturvidha
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Telugu

    Chaturvidha

    Four Types

    Chaturvidha

  • Butt
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Butt

    English : topographic name for someone who lived near a place used for archery practice, from Middle English butte ‘mark for archery’, ‘target’, ‘goal’. In the Middle Ages archery practice was a feudal obligation, and every settlement had its practice area.English : topographic name from Middle English butte ‘strip of land abutting on a boundary’, ‘short strip or ridge at right angles to other strips in a common field’.English : from Middle English butte, bott ‘butt’, ‘cask’, applied as a metonymic occupational name for a cooper or as a nickname possibly for a heavy drinker or for a large, fat man.English : from a Middle English personal name, But(t), of unknown origin, perhaps originally a nickname meaning ‘short and stumpy’, and akin to late Middle English butt ‘thick end’, ‘stump’, ‘buttock’ (of Germanic origin).German and English : in both Middle Low German and Middle English the word but(te) denoted various types of marine fish, originally a fish with a blunt head, for example halibut (German Heilbutt) or turbot (German Steinbutt), and the surname may in some cases be a metonymic occupational name for a seller of fish or salt fish.Kashmiri : variant of Bhatt.Robert Butt came from Kent, England, to NC in 1640.

    Butt

AI search queriess for Facebook and twitter posts, hashtags with LIBIDINAL TYPES

LIBIDINAL TYPES

Follow users with usernames @LIBIDINAL TYPES or posting hashtags containing #LIBIDINAL TYPES

LIBIDINAL TYPES

Online names & meanings

  • Aleesha
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, British, Christian, English, German, Hindu, Indian, Latin, Marathi, Tamil

    Aleesha

    Noble; Nobility; Noble Sort; Variant of Alice; Protected by God; Truthful

  • Niky
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Swedish

    Niky

    Victory of the People

  • GILAD
  • Male

    Hebrew

    GILAD

    (גִּלְעָד) Hebrew name GILAD means "hard, stony region." In the bible, this is the name of region east of the Jordan River. It is also the name of several characters, including a grandson of Manasseh.

  • TALETTA
  • Female

    English

    TALETTA

    English variant spelling of Aramaic Talitha, TALETTA means "damsel, maiden."

  • Ragish | ரகீஷ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Ragish | ரகீஷ

    Goddess of melody or master of melodic modes, The Man who sings sweet ragas

  • Gokul
  • Boy/Male

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Rajasthani, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, Traditional

    Gokul

    A Place Where Lord Krishna was Brought Up

  • Zonira
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Zonira

    Precious Stone Expensive Jewel

  • Lindsay
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, British, English, Scottish, Teutonic

    Lindsay

    From the Island of the Lime Tree

  • Aarin
  • Girl/Female

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian

    Aarin

    Mountain Strength

  • Berka
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Berka

    Increase; Growth; Breeding

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  • Rig
  • n.

    The peculiar fitting in shape, number, and arrangement of sails and masts, by which different types of vessels are distinguished; as, schooner rig, ship rig, etc. See Illustration in Appendix.

  • Setter
  • n.

    One who, or that which, sets; -- used mostly in composition with a noun, as typesetter; or in combination with an adverb, as a setter on (or inciter), a setter up, a setter forth.

  • Print
  • v. t.

    To strike off an impression or impressions of, from type, or from stereotype, electrotype, or engraved plates, or the like; in a wider sense, to do the typesetting, presswork, etc., of (a book or other publication); as, to print books, newspapers, pictures; to print an edition of a book.

  • Sloop
  • n.

    A vessel having one mast and fore-and-aft rig, consisting of a boom-and-gaff mainsail, jibs, staysail, and gaff topsail. The typical sloop has a fixed bowsprit, topmast, and standing rigging, while those of a cutter are capable of being readily shifted. The sloop usually carries a centerboard, and depends for stability upon breadth of beam rather than depth of keel. The two types have rapidly approximated since 1880. One radical distinction is that a slop may carry a centerboard. See Cutter, and Illustration in Appendix.

  • Simia
  • n.

    A Linnaean genus of Quadrumana which included the types of numerous modern genera. By modern writers it is usually restricted to the genus which includes the orang-outang.

  • Typographical
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to the act or act of representing by types or symbols; emblematic; figurative; typical.

  • Prefigure
  • v. t.

    To show, suggest, or announce, by antecedent types and similitudes; to foreshadow.

  • Logography
  • n.

    A method of printing in which whole words or syllables, cast as single types, are used.

  • Typesetter
  • n.

    One who, or that which, sets type; a compositor; a machine for setting type.

  • Typology
  • n.

    The doctrine of types.

  • Typal
  • a.

    Relating to a type or types; belonging to types; serving as a type; typical.

  • Printer
  • n.

    One who prints; especially, one who prints books, newspapers, engravings, etc., a compositor; a typesetter; a pressman.

  • Plumbism
  • n.

    A diseased condition, produced by the absorption of lead, common among workers in this metal or in its compounds, as among painters, typesetters, etc. It is characterized by various symptoms, as lead colic, lead line, and wrist drop. See under Colic, Lead, and Wrist.

  • Letterpress
  • n.

    Print; letters and words impressed on paper or other material by types; -- often used of the reading matter in distinction from the illustrations.

  • Printing
  • n.

    The act, art, or practice of impressing letters, characters, or figures on paper, cloth, or other material; the business of a printer, including typesetting and presswork, with their adjuncts; typography; also, the act of producing photographic prints.

  • Systemless
  • a.

    Not having any of the distinct systems or types of structure, as the radiate, articulate, etc., characteristic of organic nature; as, all unicellular organisms are systemless.

  • Typesetting
  • n.

    The act or art of setting type.

  • Typography
  • n.

    The art of printing with types; the use of types to produce impressions on paper, vellum, etc.

  • Typography
  • n.

    The act or art of expressing by means of types or symbols; emblematical or hieroglyphic representation.

  • Typology
  • n.

    A discourse or treatise on types.