Webster
KJV
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It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American Dictionary of the English language; for, although the body of the language is the same as in England, and it is desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas; and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language. |
SUBJECTIVE, a. Relating to the subject, as opposed to the object.
Of or pertaining to a subject.
Especially, pertaining to, or derived from,
one's own consciousness, in distinction from external observation;
ralating to the mind, or intellectual world, in distinction from the
outward or material excessively occupied with, or brooding over, one's
own internal states.
* In the philosophy of the mind, subjective denotes
what is to be referred to the thinking subject, the ego;
objective, what belongs to the object of thought, the non-
ego. See Objective, Modified by, or making
prominent, the individuality of a writer or an artist] as, a
subjective drama or painting; a subjective
writer.
Syn. -- See Objective. Subjective sensation (Physiol.), one of the sensations occurring when stimuli due to internal causes excite the nervous apparatus of the sense organs, as when a person imagines he sees figures which have no objective reality. -- | ||||||||