CARE
- Definiția din dicționar
Traducere: română
Notă: Puteţi căuta fiecare cuvânt din cadrul definiţiei printr-un simplu click pe cuvântul dorit.
Care (kâr), n. [AS. caru, cearu; akin to OS. kara sorrow, Goth. kara, OHG chara, lament, and perh. to Gr. gh^rys voice. Not akin to cure. Cf. Chary.] 1. A burdensome sense of responsibility; trouble caused by onerous duties; anxiety; concern; solicitude.
[]
Care keeps his watch in every old man's eye,
And where care lodges, sleep will never lie.
Shak.
[]
2. Charge, oversight, or management, implying responsibility for safety and prosperity.
[]
The care of all the churches.
2 Cor. xi. 28.
[]
Him thy care must be to find.
Milton.
[]
Perplexed with a thousand cares.
Shak.
[]
3. Attention or heed; caution; regard; heedfulness; watchfulness; as, take care; have a care.
[]
I thank thee for thy care and honest pains.
Shak.
[]
4. The object of watchful attention or anxiety.
[]
Right sorrowfully mourning her bereaved cares.
Spenser.
Syn. -- Anxiety; solicitude; concern; caution; regard; management; direction; oversight. -- Care, Anxiety, Solicitude, Concern. These words express mental pain in different degress. Care belongs primarily to the intellect, and becomes painful from overburdened thought. Anxiety denotes a state of distressing uneasiness fron the dread of evil. Solicitude expresses the same feeling in a diminished degree. Concern is opposed to indifference, and implies exercise of anxious thought more or less intense. We are careful about the means, solicitous and anxious about the end; we are solicitous to obtain a good, anxious to avoid an evil.
[]
Care, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Cared (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Caring.] [AS. cearian. See Care, n.] To be anxious or solicitous; to be concerned; to have regard or interest; -- sometimes followed by an objective of measure.
[]
I would not care a pin, if the other three were in.
Shak.
[]
Master, carest thou not that we perish?
Mark. iv. 38.
[]
To care for. (a) To have under watchful attention; to take care of. (b) To have regard or affection for; to like or love.
[]
He cared not for the affection of the house.
Tennyson.
[]