adversion

English

Etymology

From Latin adversiōnem, from adversiō.

Noun

adversion

  1. A tendency or wish to avoid someone or something.
  2. (obsolete) A turning towards; the act of paying attention.
    • 1642, H[enry] M[ore], “ΑΝΤΙΨΥΧΟΠΑΝΝΥΧΙΑ [Antipsychopannychia], or A Confutation of the Sleep of the Soul after Death”, in ΨΥΧΩΔΙΑ [Psychōdia] Platonica: Or A Platonicall Song of the Soul, [], Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: [] Roger Daniel, printer to the Universitie, →OCLC:
      And if the eye / Of her adversion were fast fixt on high, / In midst of death 'twere no more fear or pain, / Then 'twas unto Elias to let flie
    • 1890, Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield, “Chapter 3”, in On the Revision of the Confession of Faith:
      We have tested assertions of this kind, not as we should, by grounded and consecutive study of the whole document, but by momentary adversion to the passages specially attacked, with our minds full of the attack

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