apziņa
See also: apziņā
Latvian
Etymology
Nominal form of the stem of the verb apzināt, the original meaning of which was “to know, to perceive (something)”; apziņa was therefore initially “knowledge”. In the late 19th century, A. Kronvalds began using this word in the sense of "conviction", "understadning", "consciousness (of something)"; in the 1920s, it became accepted as a philosophy term, corresponding to Russian сознание (soznanije), German Bewusstsein.[1]
Pronunciation
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Noun
apziņa f (4th declension)
- (philosophy) consciousness (the capacity of the human brain to reflect objective reality)
- apziņas attiecība pret esamību ― the relation of consciousness to existence
- Sečenovs pierādīja, ka cilvēka apziņa, viņa domas ir galvas smadzeņu darbības rezultāts ― Sečenovs showed that human consciousness and thoughts are the result of brain activity
- Augusta izmisums auga augumā, kamēr kļuva tik liels, ka nevarēja vairs ietverties viņa apziņā ― Augusts' despair grew and grew, until it became so large that it could no longer be apprehended in his consciousness
- consciousness, sense of reality (the ability to perceive aspects of reality and to react accordingly)
- apziņas traucējumi ― disorders of consciousness
- vienu brīdi vēl iekrita prātā, ka visu šo dienu nemaz nav atcerējies tēvu... viņš gribēja sevi rāt un kaunināt, bet miegs aizvēra apziņas vārtus ― at one point it occurred to him that during this whole day he had not even once thought of his father... he wanted to scold and shame himself, but sleep closed the doors of his consciousness
- Rita aizmirsa, ka ir skolotāja, ka zēni trokšņo un ka vajadzētu tos savaldīt... viņa juta tikai bailes, lielas un nepārvaramas, it kā būtu apziņu zaudējusi ― Rita forgot that she was a teacher, that the boys were making noise and that she would have to calm them down... she felt only fear, great, unsurmontable fear, as if she had lost her consciousness
- awareness, consciousness (belief, perception, awareness of something, opinion on something)
- vainas apziņa ― awareness of (one's) guilt
- pārākuma apziņa ― awareness of (one's) superiority
- savas rīcības pareizuma apziņa ― awareness of the correctness of one's actions
- consciousness, sense, conviction (conscientious, understanding attitude toward something)
- šķiras apziņa ― class consciousness
- pienākuma apziņa ― sense of duty
- Ļeņins mācīja partiju pacelt masu apziņu līdz avangarda apziņas līmenim ― Lenin taught the (communist) party to raise the consciousness of the masses to the consciousness level of the avant-garde
- strādnieka apziņas, strādnieka spītības, strādnieka lepnuma viņam nekad nav bijis, und bez tā strādnieks nav strādnieks ― he had never had a worker's consciousness, obstinacy, and pride, and without that a worker is not a worker
Declension
Declension of apziņa (4th declension)
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | apziņa | — |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | apziņu | — |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | apziņas | — |
dative (datīvs) | apziņai | — |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | apziņu | — |
locative (lokatīvs) | apziņā | — |
vocative (vokatīvs) | apziņa | — |
Synonyms
- (of "awareness"): apzināšanās
- (of "understanding"): izpratne
Derived terms
Related terms
References
- ^ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “apziņa”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca[1] (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN