III. Soul ·noun A pure or disembodied spirit.
IV. Soul ·vi To afford suitable sustenance.
V. Soul ·vt To indue with a soul; to furnish with a soul or mind.
VI. Soul ·noun The seat of real life or vitality; the source of action; the animating or essential part.
VII. Soul ·noun A human being; a person;
- a familiar appellation, usually with a qualifying epithet; as, poor soul.
VIII. Soul ·noun The leader; the inspirer; the moving spirit; the heart; as, the soul of an enterprise; an able general is the soul of his army.
IX. Soul ·noun Energy; courage; spirit; fervor; affection, or any other noble manifestation of the heart or moral nature; inherent power or goodness.
X. Soul ·noun The spiritual, rational, and immortal part in man; that part of man which enables him to think, and which renders him a subject of moral government;
- sometimes, in distinction from the higher nature, or spirit, of man, the so-called animal soul, that is, the seat of life, the sensitive affections and phantasy, exclusive of the voluntary and rational powers;
- sometimes, in distinction from the mind, the moral and emotional part of man's nature, the seat of feeling, in distinction from intellect;
- sometimes, the intellect only; the understanding; the seat of knowledge, as distinguished from feeling. In a more general sense, "an animating, separable, surviving entity, the vehicle of individual personal existence".