sympathy - meaning and definition. What is sympathy
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What (who) is sympathy - definition

PERCEPTION, UNDERSTANDING, AND REACTION TO THE DISTRESS OR NEED OF ANOTHER HUMAN BEING
Support (emotion); Sympathetically; Sympathize; Emotional support
  • A baby will often cry at the sound of another baby's cries.
  • Facial expressions can communicate sympathy and other emotions nonverbally.
  • Medical personnel aid a suffering woman after the [[2010 Haiti earthquake]].
  • Sympathy is being studied with new technology.

sympathy         
n.
1) to arouse, stir up sympathy for
2) to capture; command sympathy
3) to express; feel, have sympathy for
4) to display, show sympathy for
5) to lavish sympathy on
6) to accept smb.'s sympathy
7) deep, deepest, great, heartfelt, profound, strong sympathy (please accept our deepest sympathy)
8) little sympathy for (to have little sympathy for smb.)
9) one's sympathy goes out to smb.
10) a token of one's sympathy
11) sympathy for (to have sympathy for the underdog)
12) in sympathy with (to be in complete sympathy with smb.'s cause)
13) out of sympathy (we did it out of sympathy for your family)
sympathy         
¦ noun (plural sympathies)
1. feelings of pity and sorrow for someone else's misfortune.
(one's sympathies) condolences.
2. understanding between people; common feeling.
a favourable attitude.
(in sympathy) relating harmoniously to something else; in keeping.
3. the state or fact of responding in a way corresponding to an action elsewhere.
Origin
C16: via L. from Gk sumpatheia, from sumpathes, from sun- 'with' + pathos 'feeling'.
Usage
On the difference between sympathy and empathy, see usage at empathy.
sympathy         
n.
1.
Fellow-feeling.
2.
Agreement, harmony, correspondence, correlation, affinity, union, reciprocity, pre-established harmony, congeniality, concord, concert.
3.
Compassion, commiseration, condolence, pity, tenderness, kindliness, fellow-feeling, bowels of compassion.
4.
Mutual influence.

Wikipedia

Sympathy

Sympathy is the perception of, understanding of, and reaction to the distress or need of another life form. According to David Hume, this sympathetic concern is driven by a switch in viewpoint from a personal perspective to the perspective of another group or individual who is in need. Hume explained that this is the case because "the minds of all men are similar in their feelings and operations" and that "the motion of one communicates itself to the rest" so that as "affections readily pass from one person to another… they beget correspondent movements." Along with Hume, two other men, Adam Smith and Arthur Schopenhauer, worked to better define sympathy. Hume was mostly known for epistemology, Smith was known for his economic theory, and Schopenhauer for the philosophy of the will. An American professor, Brene Brown, views sympathy as a way to stay out of touch with ones emotions. They attempt to make sense out of the situation and see it from the person receiving the sympathy's perception.

Examples of use of sympathy
1. There is personal sympathy for him among some Labour ministers, but no political sympathy at all.
2. The complaint gets little international sympathy.
3. His overtures were received with restrained sympathy.
4. When threatened, they elicit our instinctive sympathy.
5. Save the sympathy for those who deserve it. – Stuart A, Ames, USA (Ex–pat) I have no sympathy the damned cheat.