interior

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Synonyms for interior

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for interior

located inside or farther in

of, relating to, or arising from one's mental or spiritual being

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Synonyms for interior

the region that is inside of something

the inner or enclosed surface of something

Synonyms

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the United States federal department charged with conservation and the development of natural resources

situated within or suitable for inside a building

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Antonyms

inside the country

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located inward

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inside and toward a center

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of or coming from the middle of a region or country

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In Chapters 2 and 3, the author analyzes works by Granada and Quevedo, respectively, as examples of dissective narratives that demonstrate the complexity of interiority through anatomical references.
The interiority of infinite potentiality that is glimpsed in the face of the Other likewise extends beyond the enclosure of Totality.
People think: whether in the framework of a politics at a distance from the State (politics in interiority), or in the framework of a politics in the space of the State (politics in exteriority).
As with bottle episodes' adoption of theatrical spatial dynamics, the revelation of interiority is always realistically motivated.
In Farrell's view, this gives Ong a sensitivity to those questions of interiority, of address--how do people respond to one who calls their name?
Looking at us through the prism of her own interiority, the almond-sliver of her face alert, intelligent, she has the rich interior, what Freud tried to elicit from his patients years later, cluttering his studio like an archeological dig of the subconscious, as though each silver-inlaid lockbox, each medallion, each figurine, sword, might correspond to an inner trope, buried deep in the womb of the mind.
Aiming to explore issues of interiority and exteriority, the artist painted scenes of fraught domesticity and the turbulent world out there, encoding and encircling each other.
It is fictional, yet plausible, and has as its subject the interiority of man in his terrestrial existence.
Rather than defining sovereignty through criteria imposed from without, I define subjective sovereignty through a notion of self-relational interiority. Here the freedom and truth a subject enjoys are figured as unactualized potentials proper to subjectivity rather than external concepts which must then be interiorized.
He claims a loyalty to a "Wittgensteinian position that meanings are essentially public affairs" (314) and continues with a strong refusal of interiority: "The sense of intention that I would be happy to preserve," he continues, "is one in which intention does not precede or generate the meaning of the text, but is rather retroactively or retrospectively posited as the purposeful structure of significance of the text" (316).
the modern individual, as they turned these plays into commercial vehicles for producing an interiority effect as a viable commodity" (90).
Specifically, Hilaire Kallendorf demonstrates the still unrealized potential of using on-line databases for locating theater texts in which monologues or dialogues highlight the process of casuistry or "conscience in action." By so doing, she expands the longstanding analytical focus of interiority in comedia studies from a more narrow scrutiny of honor and the honor code, the dominant single issue in the mid- to late-twentieth century scholarship.
In the early modern period, Hillman observes, we can see a move toward excarnation, as inwardness loses its "meaning as 'entrails,' gradually coming to mean 'interiority, inner essence'" (4).