truculence$85455$ - definição. O que é truculence$85455$. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é truculence$85455$ - definição

POSITIVE PLEASURE OR INDIFFERENCE IN INFLICTING SUFFERING
Cruel; Cruelties; Extreme cruelty; Cruelly; Cruely; Truculence; Truculently; Cruelness; Inhumane; Being mean; Hostile behavior; Be mean
  • An old poster depicting cruelty, including selling slaves in Algiers, execution, burning, and other cruelties.

inhumane         
If you describe something as inhumane, you mean that it is extremely cruel.
He was kept under inhumane conditions...
? humane
ADJ
cruelty         
n.
1) to demonstrate, display cruelty
2) consummate, deliberate, wanton cruelty
3) mental cruelty
4) cruelty to, towards (cruelty to animals)
cruelty         
n. the intentional and malicious infliction of physical or psychological pain on another. In most states various forms of "cruelty," "extreme cruelty," and/or "mental cruelty" used to be grounds for divorce if proved. This brought about a lot of unnecessary (and sometimes exaggerated or false) derogatory (nasty) testimony about the other party. There was little standardization of what constituted sufficient "cruelty" to prove a divorce should be granted. Starting in the 1960s "no fault" divorce (sometimes now called "dissolution") began to replace contentious divorces in most states, so that incompatibility became good enough grounds for granting a divorce. See also: cruel and unusual punishment divorce

Wikipédia

Cruelty

Cruelty is the pleasure in inflicting suffering or inaction towards another's suffering when a clear remedy is readily available. Sadism can also be related to this form of action or concept. Cruel ways of inflicting suffering may involve violence, but affirmative violence is not necessary for an act to be cruel. For example, if a person is drowning and begging for help and another person is able to help with no cost or risk, but is merely watching with disinterest or perhaps mischievous amusement, that person is being cruel—rather than violent.

George Eliot stated that "cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside itself; it only requires opportunity." Bertrand Russell stated that "the infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists. That is why they invented Hell." Gilbert K. Chesterton stated that "cruelty is, perhaps, the worst kind of sin. Intellectual cruelty is certainly the worst kind of cruelty."

The word has metaphorical uses, for example, "The cliffs remained cruel." (i.e., unclimbable when they desperately needed to be climbed) in The Lord of the Rings.