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Showing results for acedia. Search instead for acetyla.
Definitions

acedia

[uh-see-dee-uh] / əˈsi di ə /


Example Sentences

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Perhaps the best term for Fran’s persistent mood is acedia, that feeling of not caring much about anything, especially one’s position in the world.

From New York Times Jan. 25, 2024

I think acedia is still with us, but it emerged at this time when the culture needed a term to describe a specific experience.

From Salon Jan. 10, 2022

In the early medieval era, Christian monks were very concerned about acedia.

From Salon Jan. 10, 2022

There’s a strong case that when we are struck with acedia or simply mid-afternoon sleepiness, we should just give in, pack up, go home and start again fresh tomorrow.

From The Guardian May 29, 2019

What in Petrarch was a tendency, became an established condition in Rousseau: the acedia reached its climax.

From The Development of the Feeling for Nature in the Middle Ages and Modern Times by Biese, Alfred




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