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Apprehension   /ˌæprɪhˈɛnʃən/   Listen
noun
Apprehension  n.  
1.
The act of seizing or taking hold of; seizure; as, the hand is an organ of apprehension.
2.
The act of seizing or taking by legal process; arrest; as, the felon, after his apprehension, escaped.
3.
The act of grasping with the intellect; the contemplation of things, without affirming, denying, or passing any judgment; intellection; perception. "Simple apprehension denotes no more than the soul's naked intellection of an object."
4.
Opinion; conception; sentiment; idea. Note: In this sense, the word often denotes a belief, founded on sufficient evidence to give preponderation to the mind, but insufficient to induce certainty; as, in our apprehension, the facts prove the issue. "To false, and to be thought false, is all one in respect of men, who act not according to truth, but apprehension."
5.
The faculty by which ideas are conceived; understanding; as, a man of dull apprehension.
6.
Anticipation, mostly of things unfavorable; distrust or fear at the prospect of future evil. "After the death of his nephew Caligula, Claudius was in no small apprehension for his own life."
Synonyms: Apprehension, Alarm. Apprehension springs from a sense of danger when somewhat remote, but approaching; alarm arises from danger when announced as near at hand. Apprehension is calmer and more permanent; alarm is more agitating and transient.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Apprehension" Quotes from Famous Books



... Anthony Harman, Esq. I much prefer the former; in the first place, because it is minute and detailed, and written, it seems to me, with more caution and knowledge; and in the next, because the letters from Dr. Hedstone, which are embodied in it, furnish matter of the highest value to a right apprehension of the nature of the case. It was one of the best declared cases of an opening of the interior sense, which I have met with. It was affected too, by the phenomenon, which occurs so frequently as to indicate a law of ...
— Green Tea; Mr. Justice Harbottle • Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

... Kenyon died and left them ten thousand pounds, all their own, it placed them forever beyond the apprehension of want, and also enabled them to do for others; for they pensioned old Walter Savage Landor, and established him in comfortable quarters around ...
— Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great, Volume 5 (of 14) • Elbert Hubbard

... to chatter, her hands shook, there was a tightness in her chest, her heart began to beat with hard, dull pulsations, and at times seemed to stop beating, and she gasped for breath. A terrible apprehension seized her, while the cold seemed to penetrate to her marrow. She never had felt such a sensation, she had never seemed to lose her hold on life like this before, never been so near ...
— Une Vie, A Piece of String and Other Stories • Guy de Maupassant

... flung headlong against the high stone fence that bordered most of the road. In view of this I determined to muffle my head in the folds of my thick shawl at the moment of overturn, and as I could do no better for myself, I awaited my fate with equanimity. As far as apprehension goes, I had rather travel from Maine to Georgia by rail, than from ...
— Passages From the English Notebooks, Complete • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... and mind with a married partner is made sensible also in the body as one flesh. As the angels made these declarations, I heard it asserted by the spirits who were present, that such subjects belong to angelic wisdom, being above ordinary apprehension; but these spirits were rational-natural, and ...
— The Delights of Wisdom Pertaining to Conjugial Love • Emanuel Swedenborg


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