To: Asher
I had to look up benignant
3 entries found for benignant.
be·nig·nant ( P ) Pronunciation Key (b-ngnnt)
adj.
Favorable; beneficial.
Kind and gracious.
be·nignant·ly adv.
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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benignant
\Be*nig"nant\, a. [LL. benignans, p. pr. of benignare, from L. benignus. See Benign.] Kind; gracious; favorable. -- Be*nig\"nant*ly, adv.
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
benignant
adj 1: pleasant and beneficial in nature or influence; "a benign smile"; "the benign sky"; "the benign influence of pure air [syn: benign] [ant: malign] 2: characterized by kindness and warm courtesy especially of a king to his subjects; "our benignant king" [syn: gracious]
Source: WordNet ® 1.6, © 1997 Princeton University
3 posted on
04/04/2003 9:58:10 AM PST by
Blueflag
To: Blueflag
LOL! I had to look it up also, but I wasn't going to admit it. :D
5 posted on
04/04/2003 10:21:25 AM PST by
xJones
To: Blueflag
From the complete OED on CD-ROM (I bet this is what WSC used; although not this edition of course):
benignant, a.
[A recent formation on benign, or L. benignus, after malignant, which is of much earlier standing, and has a Latin prototype. Not in Johnson; nor in Bailey 1800, though freely used by Burke and Boswell in 1791.]
1. Cherishing or exhibiting kindly feeling towards inferiors or dependants; gracious, benevolent (with some suggestion of condescension or patronage).
a1782 Maiden's Wish in Ritson Coll. Eng. Songs I. iv. 20 (T.) Defend my heart, benignant Power. 1791 Burke Let. Memb. Nat. Assembly Wks. VI. 45 The king+was+the very reverse of your benignant sovereign. 1859 Geo. Eliot A. Bede 2 His glance, instead of being keen, is confiding and benignant. 1875 Browning Aristoph. Apol. 119 Theirs would be To prove benignantest of playfellows.
2. transf. a. Of things: Exerting a good or kindly influence; favourable, beneficial, salutary.
1790 Boswell Johnson IV. 314 (T.) As if its [Christianity's] influence on the mind were not benignant. 1798 Southey Sonn. xiii. Wks. II. 96 For like a God thou [O Sun] art, and on thy way Of glory sheddest with benignant ray, Beauty, and life, and joyance from above. 1844 Mem. Babylonian P'cess II. 183 Our destiny is settled in this world by the benignant or malignant character of our natal star.
b. Of a disease: not malignant or recurrent; = benign a. 5b.
1897 [see siphoned a. 2]. 1932 Discovery Dec. 376/2 Similar rays+are given out+by cancerous growths, but not by so-called benignant
6 posted on
04/04/2003 10:23:34 AM PST by
Asher
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