alter+ego
101alter — ÁLTER ÉGO m. 1) Un alt eu, interior. 2) Persoană care se aseamănă până la identificare cu o alta. 3) Persoană în care poţi avea încredere ca în tine însuţi. /cuv. lat. Trimis de siveco, 22.08.2004. Sursa: NODEX …
102Alter schützt vor Torheit nicht — Geflügelte Worte A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O …
103ego — n. 1) to feed, flatter smb. s ego 2) an inflated, overbearing, overwhelming ego 3) an alter ego * * * [ iːgəʊ] flatter smb. s ego overbearing overwhelming ego an alter ego an inflated to feed …
104Ego — Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « Ego », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) Ego est un substantif tiré du pronom personnel grec εγὠ (« je/moi »). Il désigne généralement la représentation et la conscience que …
105ego — Synonyms and related words: I, I myself, alter, alter ego, alterum, anima, anima humana, atman, ba, better self, breath, breath of life, buddhi, coconscious, collective unconscious, conscience, conscious self, death instinct, divine breath, ego… …
106ego — e|go [ˈi:gəu, ˈegəu US gou] n plural egos [Date: 1800 1900; : Latin; Origin: I ] 1.) the opinion that you have about yourself big/enormous etc ego ▪ Richard has the biggest ego (=thinks he is very clever and important) of anyone I ve ever met. ▪… …
107alter — [14] Alter comes from the Latin word for ‘other (of two)’, alter. In late Latin a verb was derived from this, alterāre, which English acquired via French altérer. Latin alter (which also gave French autre and English alternate [16], alternative… …
108alter — [14] Alter comes from the Latin word for ‘other (of two)’, alter. In late Latin a verb was derived from this, alterāre, which English acquired via French altérer. Latin alter (which also gave French autre and English alternate [16], alternative… …
109ego — [19] Ego is Latin for ‘I’ (and comes in fact from the same Indo European base as produced English I). English originally acquired it in the early 19th century as a philosophical term for the ‘conscious self’, and the more familiar modern uses –… …
110ego — [19] Ego is Latin for ‘I’ (and comes in fact from the same Indo European base as produced English I). English originally acquired it in the early 19th century as a philosophical term for the ‘conscious self’, and the more familiar modern uses –… …