fellow feeling

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See also: fellow-feeling

English

Alternative forms

Noun

fellow feeling (usually uncountable, plural fellow feelings)

  1. A sense of sympathy for, consideration of, or shared interests with one or more other human beings.
    • 1817, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, chapter 2, in Biographia Literaria:
      [I]s the character and property of the man, who labours for our intellectual pleasures, less entitled to a share of our fellow feeling, than that of the wine-merchant or milliner?
    • 1857, Herman Melville, chapter 43, in The Confidence Man:
      "[H]ow kindly we reciprocate each other's little delicacies, don't we? What better proof, now, that we are kind, considerate fellows, with responsive fellow-feelings—eh, barber?"
    • 1917, John Galsworthy, chapter 15, in Beyond:
      But, mixed with her rage, a sort of unwilling compassion and fellow feeling kept rising for that girl, that silly, sugar-plum girl, brought to such a pass by—her husband.
    • 2002, Robert Sullivan, "Week One: A Warm Winter Olympics," Time, 16 Feb.:
      Even when the wind blew cold, the fine sportsmanship and fellow feeling that is traditional to the Winter Games, lifted last week to an absurd height by the love-everybody snowboarders, the new let's do-right IOC and the continuing sympathy for the U. S. of A., was lovely to see — and to join.

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