Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot
Ääntäminen
- Tuntematon aksentti:
- IPA: /ˈfɪləɹast/
- IPA: /ˈfɪləˌɹæst/
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
Määritelmät
Substantiivit
- (chiefly in historical usage pertaining to Ancient Greece) A boy who feels philia or, more specifically, anterōs for his paederastic lover.
Esimerkit
- When in turn they reach man’s estate they love youths themselves[; i]n general terms such people are either paiderasts or philerasts, being always attracted by kindred kind. But when a boy-lover, or any other, chances to meet his own original half, they are both seized with an ecstasy of affection and intimacy and love, and can hardly bear to be separated for as much as a single instant from each other.
- [...] “while they are still boys [i.e., pubescent or pre-adult], they are fond of men, and enjoy lying down together with them and twining their limbs about them, . . . but when they become men they are lovers of boys. . . . Such a man is a paederast and philerast [i.e., fond of or responsive to adult male lovers]” at different stages of his life [...]
- [The Ancient Greeks] also had a word which can be rendered ‘philerast’, meaning a boy who loves his lover.
- Milton strained to redefine marriage as the friendship Socrates recommended — an erotics beyond the sexual. As a result, his notion of marriage sometimes looks a lot like a heteroerotic paederasty, with Adam as the paederast and Eve the philerast destined never to outgrow the role of student and beloved.
- For more examples of the usage of this term see this entry’s citations page as well as the citations page for philerast.
Taivutusmuodot