"Vigor" is a word in ENGLISH
Strength or force in animal or force in animal or vegetable
nature or action; as, a plant grows with vigor.
Active strength or force of body or mind; capacity for
exertion, physically, intellectually, or morally; force; energy.
To invigorate.
Strength; efficacy; potency.
Fatally, the term 'barbarian' is the password that opens up the archives of the twentieth century. It refers to the despiser of achievement, the vandal, the status denier, the iconoclast, who refuses to acknowledge any ranking rules or hierarchy. Whoever wishes to understand the twentieth century must always keep the barbaric factor in view. Precisely in more recent modernity, it was and still is typical to allow an alliance between barbarism and success before a large audience, initially more in the form of insensitive imperialism, and today in the costumes of that invasive vulgarity which advances into virtually all areas through the vehicle of popular culture. That the barbaric position in twentieth-century Europe was even considered the way forward among the purveyors of high culture for a time, extending to a messianism of uneducatedness, indeed the utopia of a new beginning on the clean slate of ignorance, illustrates the extent of the civilizatory crisis this continent has gone through in the last century and a half - including the cultural revolution downwards, which runs through the twentieth century in our climes and casts its shadow ahead onto the twenty-first.
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Having sufficient power, strength, force, skill, means, or resources of any kind to accomplish the object; possessed of qualifications rendering …
Read the complete definitionTo cover or furnish with a plate, or with whatever will add strength, force, security, or efficiency; as, to arm …
Read the complete definitionFurnished with whatever serves to add strength, force, or efficiency.
Read the complete definitionWant or loss of strength; debility; diminution of the vital forces.
Read the complete definitionTo be of use or advantage; to answer the purpose; to have strength, force, or efficacy sufficient to accomplish the …
Read the complete definitionIn English law. A law for the heir to punish waste in the life of the ancestor. “Though it be …
Read the complete definitionTo pull; to exert strength in drawing anything; to have force to move anything by pulling; as, a horse draws …
Read the complete definitionTo use strength in action; to act or operate with force or vigor; to act in producing an effect.
Read the complete definitionTo give strength or force to; to make active; to alacrify; as, to energize the will.
Read the complete definitionStrength of expression; force of utterance; power to impress the mind and arouse the feelings; life; spirit; -- said of …
Read the complete definitionTo deprive of nerve, force, strength, or courage; to render feeble or impotent; to make effeminate; to impair the moral …
Read the complete definitionWeakened; weak; without strength of force.
Read the complete definitionTo make feeble; to deprive of strength; to reduce the strength or force of; to weaken; to debilitate.
Read the complete definitionForce; strength; power.
Read the complete definitionTo put force, ability, or anything of the nature of an active faculty; to put in vigorous action; to bring …
Read the complete definitionStrength or power for war; hence, a body of land or naval combatants, with their appurtenances, ready for action; -- …
Read the complete definitionTo compel, as by strength of evidence; as, to force conviction on the mind.
Read the complete definitionTo obtain or win by strength; to take by violence or struggle; specifically, to capture by assault; to storm, as …
Read the complete definitionStrength or power exercised without law, or contrary to law, upon persons or things; violence.
Read the complete definitionTo impel, drive, wrest, extort, get, etc., by main strength or violence; -- with a following adverb, as along, away, …
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