na·ture
(nā′chər)n.1. a. The material world and its phenomena: scientists analyzing nature.
b. The forces and processes that produce and control these phenomena: the balance of nature.
2. The world of living things and the outdoors: spent the day enjoying nature.
3. A primitive state of existence, untouched and uninfluenced by civilization or social constraints: when people lived in a state of nature.
4. The basic character or qualities of humanity: It is only human nature to worry about the future.
5. The fundamental character or disposition of a person; temperament:
a man of an irascible nature. See Synonyms at
disposition.
6. The set of inherent characteristics or properties that distinguish something: trying to determine the nature of a newly discovered phenomenon.
7. A kind or sort: confidences of a personal nature.
8. a. The processes and functions of the body, as in healing: The doctor decided not to do anything and let nature take its course.
b. Heredity: behavior more influenced by nature than nurture.
[Middle English,
essential properties of a thing, from Old French, from Latin
nātūra, from
nātus, past participle of
nāscī,
to be born; see
genə- in
Indo-European roots.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
nature
(ˈneɪtʃə) n1. the fundamental qualities of a person or thing; identity or essential character
2. (often capital, esp when personified) the whole system of the existence, arrangement, forces, and events of all physical life that are not controlled by man
3. (Biology) all natural phenomena and plant and animal life, as distinct from man and his creations
4. a wild primitive state untouched by man or civilization
5. natural unspoilt scenery or countryside
6. disposition or temperament
7. tendencies, desires, or instincts governing behaviour
8. the normal biological needs or urges of the body
9. sort; kind; character
10. the real appearance of a person or thing: a painting very true to nature.
11. accepted standards of basic morality or behaviour
12. (Biology)
biology the complement of genetic material that partly determines the structure of an organism; genotype. Compare
nurture3 13. Irish sympathy and fondness for one's own people or native place: she is full of nature.
14. against nature unnatural or immoral
15. by nature essentially or innately
16. call of nature informal euphemistic or jocular the need to urinate or defecate
17. from nature using natural models in drawing, painting, etc
18. in the nature of of the nature of essentially the same as; by way of
[C13: via Old French from Latin nātūra, from nātus, past participle of nascī to be born]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
na•ture
(ˈneɪ tʃər)
n. 1. the natural world as it exists without human beings or civilization.
2. the elements of the natural world, as mountains, trees, animals, or rivers.
3. natural scenery.
4. the universe, with all its phenomena.
5. the particular combination of qualities belonging to a person, animal, thing, or class by birth, origin, or constitution; native or inherent character.
6. character, kind, or sort: two books of the same nature.
7. characteristic disposition; temperament: an evil nature.
8. the natural, primitive condition of humankind.
9. biological functions or urges.
10. the laws and principles that guide the universe or an individual.
Idioms: by nature, as a result of inborn or inherent qualities; innately.
[1200–50; Middle English
natur(e) < Old French < Latin
nātūra=
nāt(us), past participle of
nāscī to be born +
-ūra -ure]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
na·ture
(nā′chər)1. The world and its naturally occurring phenomena, together with all of the physical laws that govern them.
2. Living organisms and their environments.
The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Nature
the study of the sources and formation of amber. — ambrologic, ambrological, adj.
the assignment of a humanlike soul to nature. — anthropopsychic, adj.
the study of inanimate nature.
the quality of chemical activities, properties, or relationships.
a person who advocates the conservation of the natural resources of a country or region. — conservational, adj.
the science of the causes of natural phenomena. — etiologic, aetiologic, etiological, aetiological, adj.
the worship of nature. — physiolater, n. — physiolatrous, adj.
the body of wisdom about nature.
1. the principle or concept of growth and change in nature.
2. nature considered as the source of growth and change.
3. something that grows or develops.
1. the assignment of a physical form to a god.
2. the deification and worship of natural phenomena; physiolatry.
produced by natural rather than divine or human forces.
a dissertation on the wonders of nature. — thaumatographic, adj.
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Nature
See Also: FLOWERS, LEAVES, MOON, OCEAN/OCEANFRONT, PONDS AND STREAMS, RAIN, SEASCAPES, SKYSCAPES, SNOW, STARS, SUN, THUNDER AND LIGHTNING, TREES, WEATHER
- Big heavy drops [of dew] … lie on the face of the earth like sweat —Shirley Ann Grau
- Bushes … like heads; you could have sworn sometimes you saw them mounting and swaying in manly talk —Elizabeth Bowen
- The damp stands on the long green grass as thick as morning’s tears —Emily Brontë
See Also: THICKNESS
- The dawn clings to the river like a fog —Yvor Winters
- Dew as thick as frost —Paul Theroux
- Dew gleamed and sparkled like myriads of tiny mirrors —Dorothy Livesay
- The dew is beaded like mercury on the coarsened grass —Adrienne Rich
- Dew … like trembling silver leaves —Dame Edith Sitwell
- Driftwood gnarled and knobby like old human bones —Charles Johnson
- The earth is like the breast of a woman: useful as well as pleasing —Friedrich Nietzsche
- Earth was like a jostling festival of seeds grown fat —Wallace Stevens
- Flecks of ice still clung to his collar, flashing like brilliants —William H. Gass
- Frost was like stiff icing sugar on all the roofs —H. E. Bates
- The garden we planted and nurtured through the spring … fills out like an adolescent at summer camp —Ira Wood
- The grass like a prophet’s beard, thoughtful and greying —Charles Simic
- The grass on the roadside moved under the evening wind, sounding like many pairs of hands rubbed softly together —H. E. Bates
- Grass patches … like squares on a game board —Mary Hedin
- Grass … thick as wind —David Ignatow
- Hedges as solid as walls —Edith Wharton
- Here a giant philodendron twined around a sapodilla tree and through the branches of a hibiscus bush like a green arm drawing two friends together —Dorothy Francis
- Ice-crystals, shaped like fern-leaves —Anatole France
- Light hung in the trees like cobwebs —Jay Parini
- The light is in the dark river of the hot spring evening like a dry wine in a decanter —Delmore Schwartz
- Like a great poet, Nature knows how to produce the greatest effects with the most limited means —Heinrich Heine
- Like a slim reed of crystal, a fountain hung in the dusky air —Oscar Wilde
- The moisture in the air seemed suspended like tiny pearls —Rita Mae Brown
- Moss that looks and feels like felt —Brad Leithauser
- Nature is like a beautiful woman that may be as delightfully and as truly known at a certain distance as upon a closer view —George Santayana
Santayana expanded on the simile as follows: “As to knowing her through and through, that is nonsense in both cases, and might not reward our pains.”
- Nature is like a revolving door: what goes out in one form comes back in another —Anon
- Nature like life, she strips men of their pretensions and vanities, exposes the weakness of the weak and the folly of the fool —W. Macneile Dixon
- Nature, like lives while they are being lived, is subject to laws of motion; it cannot be stopped and thereby comprehended —Margaret Sutherland
- Pebbles [on beach] lit like eggs —Jay Parini
- A plant is like a self-willed man, out of whom we can obtain all which we desire, if we will only treat him his own way —Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- A rampant twining vine of wisteria; ancient and knotted like muscles —Marge Piercy
- Sea shells as big as melons. Others like peas —John Cheever
- The [clam] shells shone like rainbows —Will Weaver
- The shrubs burgeon like magic beanstalks —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- The soil [being dug with a spade] slices off like fudge —Sharon Sheehe Stark
- Sun-baked tomatoes … hung like red balloons filled with water —Anon
- The surrounding nature is soundless as if it were under water —Shohei Ooka
- Thistles stood looking like prophets in the Bible in Solomon’s house —Eudora Welty
- Tiny, sand-sized bits of green moss hung in slanted drifts in the water like grain dust in sunlight —Will Weaver
- Trees and flowers that crowded to the path’s edge like children —Helen Hudson
- The tufts of moss, like piles of house dust, that hang trembling on the bare winter trees —Elizabeth Hardwick
- The twilight seems like a canopy —Erich Maria Remarque
- Undergrowth [of a path] spotted with moonlight like a leapord’s skin —Colette
- The water rippled like a piece of cloth —William Faulkner
- The white of the snow and sky filled my eyes like the sheet pulled over the head of a dead man —Steve Erickson
- A white sky made the bare branches of the elms [in March] seem like bones —Louis Auchincloss
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
nature
1. 'nature'Nature is used for talking about all living things and natural processes.
I am interested in science and learning about nature's secrets.
We must consider the ecological balance of nature.
When nature has this meaning, don't use 'the' in front of it.
2. 'the country'Don't use 'nature' to refer to land outside towns and cities. You refer to this land as the country or the countryside.
We live in the country.
We missed the English countryside.
Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012