οὐσία

See also: ουσία

Ancient Greek

FWOTD – 6 November 2014

Alternative forms

Etymology

From ὤν, οὖσᾰ, ὄν (ṓn, oûsa, ón, being), the present participle of εἰμῐ́ (eimí) (“to be”), + -ῐ́ᾱ (-íā, abstract noun suffix).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

οὐσίᾱ • (ousíā) f (genitive οὐσίᾱς); first declension

  1. that which is one's own, one's substance, property
  2. (philosophy) Synonym of φύσις (phúsis) stable being, immutable reality
    1. substance, essence
    2. true nature of that which is a member of a kind
    3. the possession of such a nature, substantiality
    4. (in the concrete) the primary real, the substratum underlying all change and process in nature
    5. (logic) substance as the leading category
    6. (various uses after Plato and Aristotle)
      • c. 334 BCEc. 262 BCE, Zeno of Citium, Stoic 1.24
      • Polystr. 12
      • 204 CE – 270 CE, Plotinus, Collected Works 2.4.5
      • 204 CE – 270 CE, Plotinus, Collected Works 2.6.1
      • 204 CE – 270 CE, Plotinus, Collected Works 4.7.8
      • 204 CE – 270 CE, Plotinus, Collected Works 6.1.2
    7. Pythagorean name for I
      • Theol., Ar. 6
  3. name of a plaster
    • Aet. 15.15.45
  4. a fire-resisting substance
    • 498 CE – 518 CE, Zosimus, Alch. 168B
  5. (in magic) a material thing by which a connection is established between the person to be acted upon and the supernatural agent

Inflection

Descendants

  • Greek: ουσία (ousía)
  • Arabic: أُوسِيَّة (ʔūsiyya)

References

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