| pathetic | 1. Expressing or showing anger; passionate. 2. Affecting or moving the tender emotions, especially. Pity or grief; full of pathos; as, a pathetic song or story. "Pathetic action." "No theory of the passions can teach a man to be pathetic." (E. <anatomy> Porter) Pathetic muscle, the fourth cranial, or trochlear, nerve, which supplies the superior oblique, or pathetic, muscle of the eye. The pathetic, a style or manner adapted to arouse the tender emotions. Origin: L. Patheticus, Gr, fr, to suffer: cf. F. Pathetique. See Pathos. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| pathetic nerve | <anatomy, nerve> The trochlear nerve controls an extraocular muscle. Lesions of this nerve will result in rotation of the eyeball upward and outward (and double vision). Synonym: cranial nerve IV. (27 Sep 1997) |
| pathetic |
hapless: deserving or inciting pity; "a hapless victim"; "miserable victims of war"; "the shabby room struck her as extraordinarily pathetic"- Galsworthy; "piteous appeals for help"; "pitiable homeless children"; "a pitiful fate"; "Oh, you poor thing"; "his poor distorted limbs"; "a wretched life" inspiring mixed contempt and pity; "their efforts were pathetic"; "pitiable lack of character"; "pitiful exhibition of cowardice" inspiring scornful pity; "how silly an ardent and unsuccessful wooer can be especially if he is getting on in years"- Dashiell Hammett
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| pathetic | inspiring scornful pity |
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| pathetic | inspiring mixed contempt and pity |
| pathetic | deserving or inciting pity |
| pathetic | the fallacy of attributing human feelings to inanimate objects |
| pathetic | arousing scornful pity |
| pathetic | in a manner arousing sympathy and compassion |
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