1. Désordre. Mettre le trouble dans une réunion.
2. Désarroi. Cacher son trouble.
3. Anomalie. Trouble de fonctionnement.
4. Filet de pêche.
5. (Au pluriel) Émeute. Une journée de troubles.
ETYM Pref. dis- + order: cf. French désordre.
1. A disturbance of normal functioning; SYN. upset.
2. A disturbance of the peace or of public order.
ETYM Latin emovere, emotum, to remove, shake, stir up; e out + movere to move: cf. French émotion. Related to Move, Emmove.
In philosophy, a mental state of feeling, rather than thinking or knowing. In Western culture, Romanticism has encouraged the view that reason and emotion are engaged in a perpetual battle, whereas Classicism treats them as complementary aspects of being human and recommends rational reflection on which emotion is the most appropriate to feel in any particular circumstance.
Scottish 18th-century philosopher David Hume argues that reason is “the slave of the passions”, or emotions. US philosopher William James argued in the 1890s that emotional feeling arises from the behavior associated with the emotion: we feel sorry because we cry, and angry because we strike, not vice versa.
In psychology, a powerful feeling; a complex state of body and mind involving, in its bodily aspect, changes in the viscera (main internal organs) and in facial expression and posture, and in its mental aspect, heightened perception, excitement and, sometimes, disturbance of thought and judgment. The urge to action is felt and impulsive behavior may result.
As a subject area of both biology and psychology, emotion has aroused much controversy. Charles Darwin, in his book The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals 1872, argued that there are specific, fundamental emotions which are first aroused and then expressed in overt behavior. William James believed the opposite, namely that emotions actually are the feeling, or sensing, of the bodily changes as they occur when some exciting event or fact is perceived; the Danish physiologist Carl Georg Lange (1834–1900) came independently to much the same conclusion. Their theoretical position, which became known as the James–Lange theory, received considerable criticism at the start of the 20th century. More recently it has been proposed, by US psychologist Stanley Schachter and others, that the visceral changes are more or less the same for all emotions but that the quality of the feelings described—fear, joy, elation, and so on—depend on the individual’s cognitive and perceptual evaluation of whatever is new, disruptive, or inconsistent in the environment.
Any strong feeling.
ETYM Latin perturbatio: cf. French perturbation.
1. A disposition that is confused or nervous and upset; SYN. fluster.
2. Activity that is an intrusion or interruption; SYN. disturbance.
ETYM French trouble, Old Fren. troble, truble. Related to Trouble.
1. A source of difficulty; SYN. problem.
2. A state of adversity (danger or affliction or need); SYN. ill, distress.
3. An effort that is inconvenient; SYN. difficulty.
4. An event causing distress or pain.
5. An unwanted pregnancy.
Agitated; disturbed; troubled.
1. Not settled or established
2. Not yet settled
3. Still in doubt
1. Qui n'est pas transparent. Eau trouble.
2. Confus. Avoir la vue trouble.
3. Suspect. Une histoire trouble.
4. Impur. Un plaisir trouble.
1. Indistinct or hazy in outline; SYN. blurred, blurry, foggy, fuzzy, hazy, muzzy.
2. Tired to the point of exhaustion; SYN. blear, bleary-eyed, blear-eyed.