human
61human — a. 1. Man s, of man, belonging to man. 2. Common to mankind. 3. Like a man, like a human being, full of fellow feeling, full of common human feeling, full of heart, sympathetic …
62human — adj 1. humane, kindly, sensitive, accessible, down to earth, earthy; vulnerable, flesh and blood, weak, defenseless, unguarded; faulty, errant, erring. See humane. 2. mortal, corporeal, transient, transitory, fleeting, passing, short lived,… …
63human — [14] Human comes via Old French humain from Latin hūmānus. Like homō ‘person’, this was related to Latin humus ‘earth’, and was used originally for ‘people’ in the sense ‘earthly beings’ (in contrast with the immortal gods). Humane is essentially …
64human — See human, humane …
65human — adj. Human is used with these nouns: ↑achievement, ↑activity, ↑affair, ↑agent, ↑anatomy, ↑ancestor, ↑aspect, ↑aspiration, ↑attribute, ↑barricade, ↑behaviour, ↑ …
66human — hu·ma̲n Adj; geschr; 1 gut zu anderen Menschen ≈ menschenfreundlich ↔ inhuman <jemandes Einstellung, ein Vorgesetzter> 2 so, dass die Würde des Menschen geachtet / respektiert wird ≈ menschenwürdig ↔ unmenschlich: humaner Strafvollzug; Der… …
67human... — hu|man..., Hu|man... <zu ↑human> Wortbildungselement mit der Bedeutung »den Menschen betreffend, zum Menschen gehörend«, z. B. humangenetisch, Humanmedizin …
68human — see to err is human …
69Human security — is an emerging paradigm for understanding global vulnerabilities whose proponents challenge the traditional notion of national security by arguing that the proper referent for security should be the individual rather than the state. Human… …
70Human sacrifice — is the act of homicide (the killing of one or several human beings) in the context of a religious ritual (ritual killing). Its typology closely parallels the various practices of ritual slaughter of animals (animal sacrifice) and of religious… …