Actual Freedom – Definitions

Definitions

Label; Labile; Lackadaisical; Lacunae; Left Field; Lede

Legacy; Lese-Majesty; Liaison; Libidinosity

Life After Feelings; Liker; Locus Classicus; Logicist

Logomach/ Logomachy; Loyal Opposition; Lucubration


Label (n.)

label: (n.) fig. a short classifying phrase or name applied to a person, work of art, idea, etc. (Oxford Dictionary).

Label (v.)

label: (v.) fig. describe or designate as with a label; categorise. (Oxford Dictionary).


Labile:

labile (adj.): 1. open to change; readily changeable or unstable; [e.g.]: “labile chemical compounds”; “tissues with labile cell populations”; 2. fluctuating widely; [e.g.]: “labile hypertension”; “labile emotions”; 3. decomposing readily; [e.g.]: “the labile component of organic matter”; (n.): *lability*. [Middle English labil, ‘forgetful, wandering’, from Old French labile, from Late Latin lābilis, ‘apt to slip’, from lābī, ‘to slip’]. [emphasis added]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary)


Lackadaisical:

lackadaisical (adj.): 1. characterised by a lack of effort, care, or involvement; [e.g.]: “There’ll be no time to correct lackadaisical driving techniques after trouble develops”. (William J. Hampton); 2. lacking enthusiasm or interest; listless; casually lazy; [e.g.]: “If you weren’t so lackadaisical in your studies, you wouldn’t be so far behind in class”; (adv.): lackadaisically; (n.): lackadaisicalness; (usage note): the first two syllables of lackadaisical are pronounced ‘lack-uh’; some people use the pronunciation ‘lack-suh', as though the word were spelled ‘lacks-a-daisical’ or ‘lax-a-daisical’; the confusion is probably semantic – someone who is lackadaisical could be said to have a lax attitude; in the 2014 survey conducted by the American Heritage Dictionary, those surveyed overwhelmingly preferred the traditional pronunciation; only twelve percent of them found the lax pronunciation to be acceptable, and only six-point-five percent reported they use it as their own preferred pronunciation. {Ha! the preceding ‘usage-note’ is nothing but pettifogging nitpicking at the lowest levels a trivialist⁽*⁾ can sink to because, just as ‘lack-a-daisy’ is an extended form of ‘lack-a-day’, then so too is ‘lacks-a-daisical’ an extended form of ‘lack-a-daisical’}. [from lackadaisy, ‘alas’ extended form of lackaday (another word for ‘alas’ from “alack the day”) + -ical]. [curly-bracketed insert added] ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).

⁽*⁾trivialist (n.): someone who deals with or is interested in trivialities. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).


Lacunae:

• lacuna (n.; pl. lacunae or lacunas): 1. an empty space or a missing part; a gap; [e.g.]: “self-centred in opinion, with curious lacunae of astounding ignorance”. (Frank Norris); 2. (anatomy): a cavity, space, or depression, especially in a bone, containing cartilage or bone cells; (adj.): lacunal, lacunose, lacunary; (n.): lacunosity. [Latin lacūna, ‘pool’, ‘hollow’, ‘gap’, from lacus, ‘lake’]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).

• lacuna (n.): an interval during which continuity is suspended; (synonyms): break, gap, hiatus, interim, void. ~ (American Heritage Roget’s Thesaurus).


Left Field:

left field: fig. a position away from the centre of activity or interest; a state of ignorance, confusion, or unreality’. (Oxford Dictionary).


Lede:

lede, also lead (n.): the first sentence or paragraph of a news story, giving the most important points of the story; [e.g.]: “Check out this lede from Monday’s front page story”; (idiom; US English): bury the lede/lead: ​to give the most important point of a news story near the end instead of at the beginning; [e.g.]: “Unfortunately, he buried the lede in the last paragraph of the story”. ~ (Oxford English Dictionary).


Legacy:

• legacy (n.; pl. legacies): 1. (...); 2. something handed down from an ancestor or a predecessor or from the past; [e.g.]: “A legacy of religious freedom”; (synonyms): heritage, inheritance, tradition, legacy; these nouns denote something immaterial, such as a practice or custom, which is passed from one generation to another; [e.g.]: “An ancient heritage of volunteerism”; “A rich inheritance of ancestral storytelling”; “The family tradition dating back centuries”; “A renaissant legacy of philosophical thought”; 3. (...); 4. (adj.): (...). [Middle English legacie, ‘office of a deputy’, from Old French, from Medieval Latin lēgātia, from Latin lēgātus, past participle of lēgāre, ‘to depute’, ‘bequeath’]. ~ (American Heritage Dictionary).

• legacy (n.; pl. legacies): 1. (...); 2. something handed down or received from an ancestor or predecessor; 3. (...). [C14 (meaning: office of a legate), C15 (meaning bequest); from Medieval Latin lēgātia, ‘commission’; see legate; viz.: from Latin lēgātus, ‘deputy’, from lēgāre, ‘to delegate’; related to lēx, ‘law’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).

• legacy (n.; pl. legacies): 1. (...); 2. anything handed down from the past, as from an ancestor or predecessor; 3. (...); 4. (...); 5. (adj.): (...). [1325-75; Middle English legacie, ‘office of a deputy or legate’, from Medieval Latin lēgātia; see legate (viz.: Latin lēgātus, nounal use of masculine past participle of lēgāre, ‘to send as a legate’; ‘to commission’, ‘to bequeath’, derivative of lēx, ‘law’) + -acy]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary).

• legacy (n.): 1. (...); 2. something immaterial, as a style or philosophy, which is passed from one generation to another; (synonyms): heritage, inheritance, tradition. ~ (The American Heritage Roget’s Thesaurus).

• legacy (n.): 1. (...); 2. something handed down or received from an ancestor or predecessor; 3. (...). ~ (Collins Discovery Encyclopedia).

• legacy (n.; pl. legacies): 1. (...); 2. anything bequeathed or handed down by an ancestor or a predecessor; 3. (...); 4. (...); 5. (...); 6. (tr.v.; pret. and pp. legacied, ppr. legacying; legacy, noun): to bequeath; assign as a legacy; to leave a legacy to. [from Middle English legacie, Old French legacie (found only in sense of ‘legateship’) = Spanish legacía = Portuguese legacia, from Medieval Latin as if *legatia, for Latin legatum (hence Italian legato = Spanish legado; cf. Portuguese legado, ‘bequeathed’), ‘a bequest’, from legatus, pp. of legare, ‘bequeath’; see legate; the French legs, ‘a legacy’, is not related; it is a bad spelling of Old French lais; see lease², noun]. ~ (Century Dictionary and Cyclopaedia).

• legacy (n.): 1. (...); 2. something inherited from a predecessor; a heritage; 3. (...); 4. (...); 5. (adj.): (...). [from Old French legacie, from Medieval Latin legatia, from Latin lēgātum, participle of lēgō]. ~ (Word-Sense Online Dictionary).

• legacy (n.): 1. (...); 2. heritage, tradition, inheritance, throwback, birthright, patrimony; [e.g.]: “The ‘fight or flight syndrome’ is a legacy from the days of our ancestors”; 3. (...). ~ (Collins English Thesaurus).


Lese-Majesty:

lese-majesty (n.): 1. the insulting of a monarch or other ruler; treason; [e.g.]: ‘the Shah would whip him for his lese-majesty’; ‘The junta used lese-majesty as an excuse to stage the military coup that toppled Thaksin Shinawatra’s government’; 1.1. presumptuous or disrespectful behaviour; [e.g.]: ‘he responded to the lese-majesty of the young man with an arctic stare’. [origin: Late Middle English: from French lèse-majesté, from Latin laesa majesta, ‘injured sovereignty’]. ~ (Oxford English Dictionary).

lèse-majesté (n.): 1. any of various offences committed against the sovereign power in a state; treason; 2. an attack on authority or position. [C16: from French lèse majesté, from Latin laesa mājestās, ‘wounded majesty’]. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).


There is Life After Feelings:

Another idiomatic expression ... as in ‘there is life after forty’, and ‘there is life after retirement’, and ‘there is life after menopause’, and so on.


Liker:

liker (n.): a person who likes; [e.g.]: "In reality though, extroversion was not related to being a liker or expecting to be liked". (Scott Barry Kaufman; 2011). ~ (Collins English Dictionary).


Locus Classicus:

locus classicus (n.): an authoritative and often quoted passage from a standard work. ~ (Collins English Dictionary).


Logicist:

logicist: a (mathematical) logician; an adherent or student of logicism [the theory that a set of axioms for mathematics can be deduced from a primitive set of purely logical axioms]. (Oxford Dictionary).


Logomach:

logomach (n.): someone given to disputes over words; (synonyms): logomachist, controversialist, disputant, eristic (a person who disputes; who is good at or enjoys controversy).~ (Princeton’s WordNet 3.0).

Logomachy:

logomachy (n.): contention in words only, or a contention about words; a war of words; logomachic and *logomachical* (adj.): characterised by logomachy or verbal fencing. [from Late Greek λογομαχια [logomachia], ‘war about words’]. [emphasis added]. ~ (Century Dictionary and Cyclopaedia).


Loyal Opposition:

• [Wikipedia]: In parliamentary systems of government, the “loyal opposition” is the opposition parties in the legislature. The word ‘loyal’ indicates that the non-governing parties may oppose the actions of the sitting cabinet while remaining loyal to the formal source(s) of the government’s power, such as the monarch or constitution. This loyalty allows for a peaceful transition of power and ongoing strengthening of democratic institutions. The idea of inquisitorial opposition that held the executive to account emerged in Great Britain.

The phrase is derived from John Hobhouse stating “His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition” in 1826 in a debate in the British parliament. It is intended to illustrate that Members of Parliament in a country’s legislature may oppose the policies of the incumbent government—typically comprising parliamentarians from the party with the most seats in the elected legislative chamber—while maintaining deference to the higher authority of the state and the larger framework within which democracy operates. The concept thus permits the dissent necessary for a functioning democracy without fear of being accused of treason.

Commonwealth Realms.

The notion of a loyal opposition exists in various Commonwealth realms, being therein termed formally as “His (or Her) Majesty’s Loyal Opposition” and informally as the “Official Opposition”, with the head of the largest opposition party—normally that which holds the second largest number of seats—designated as the Leader of “Her (or His) Majesty’s Loyal Opposition”.

As a consequence of this parliamentary evolution, the sovereign’s right to the throne became more concrete, seeing the opposition scrutinise government legislation and policies, rather than engage in disputes between competing candidates for the Crown, each supported by different religious and economic groups. Further, the acceptance of such a thing as a ‘loyal opposition’ in Parliament factored into the development of a rigid party system in the United Kingdom; the separation of Members of Parliament’s loyalty to the Crown from their opposition to the sovereign’s ministers eliminated the idea that there could only be one “King’s Party” and that to oppose it would be disloyal or even treasonous.

The concept of a loyal parliamentary opposition came to be rooted in the other countries due to their being former British colonies, to which British parliamentary institutions were transported. Thus, the phrase “His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition” existed in some Commonwealth realms even before the title “Prime Minister”. Also, in federal countries, such as Canada and Australia, the phrase “Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition” is also employed in provincial or state legislatures, in the same fashion as in other parliaments. ~ (2012 Wikipedia Encyclopaedia).
(left-clicking the yellow rectangle with the capital ‘U’ opens a new web page).


Lucubration:

lucubration (n.): 1. laborious work, study, thought, etc., esp. at night; 2. the result of such activity, as a learned speech or dissertation; 3. (often, lucubrations): any literary effort, esp. of a pretentious or solemn nature. [1585-95; from Latin lūcubrātus, past participle of lūcubrāre, ‘to work by artificial light’]. ~ (Webster’s College Dictionary).


RETURN TO DEFINITIONS INDEX

RICHARD’S HOME PAGE

The Third Alternative

(Peace On Earth In This Life Time As This Flesh And Blood Body)

Here is an actual freedom from the Human Condition, surpassing Spiritual Enlightenment and any other Altered State Of Consciousness, and challenging all philosophy, psychiatry, metaphysics (including quantum physics with its mystic cosmogony), anthropology, sociology ... and any religion along with its paranormal theology. Discarding all of the beliefs that have held humankind in thralldom for aeons, the way has now been discovered that cuts through the ‘Tried and True’ and enables anyone to be, for the first time, a fully free and autonomous individual living in utter peace and tranquillity, beholden to no-one.

Richard's Text ©The Actual Freedom Trust: 1997-.  All Rights Reserved.

Disclaimer and Use Restrictions and Guarantee of Authenticity