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View synonyms for conscious
conscious
[ kon-shuhs ]
adjective
- aware of one's own existence, sensations, thoughts, surroundings, etc.
- fully aware of or sensitive to something (often followed by of ):
conscious of one's own faults; He wasn't conscious of the gossip about his past.
Synonyms: percipient, knowing
- having the mental faculties fully active:
He was conscious during the operation.
- known to oneself; felt:
conscious guilt.
- aware of what one is doing:
a conscious liar.
- aware of oneself; self-conscious.
- deliberate; intentional:
a conscious insult; a conscious effort.
- acutely aware of or concerned about:
money-conscious; a diet-conscious society.
- Obsolete. inwardly sensible of wrongdoing.
noun
- the conscious, Psychoanalysis. the part of the mind comprising psychic material of which the individual is aware.
conscious
/ ˈkɒnʃəs /
adjective
- alert and awake; not sleeping or comatose
- aware of one's surroundings, one's own thoughts and motivations, etc
- aware of and giving value or emphasis to a particular fact or phenomenon
I am conscious of your great kindness to me
- ( in combination )
clothes-conscious
- done with full awareness; deliberate
conscious rudeness
a conscious effort
- denoting or relating to a part of the human mind that is aware of a person's self, environment, and mental activity and that to a certain extent determines his choices of action
- ( as noun )
the conscious is only a small part of the mind
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Derived Forms
- ˈconsciousness, noun
- ˈconsciously, adverb
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Other Words From
- con·scious·ly adverb
- half-con·scious adjective
- half-con·scious·ness noun
- non·con·scious adjective
- non·con·scious·ness noun
- o·ver·con·scious adjective
- o·ver·con·scious·ness noun
- qua·si-con·scious adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of conscious1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of conscious1
C17: from Latin conscius sharing knowledge, from com- with + scīre to know
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Synonym Study
Conscious, aware, cognizant refer to an individual sense of recognition of something within or without oneself. Conscious implies to be awake or awakened to an inner realization of a fact, a truth, a condition, etc.: to be conscious of an extreme weariness. Aware lays the emphasis on sense perceptions insofar as they are the object of conscious recognition: He was aware of the odor of tobacco. Cognizant lays the emphasis on an outer recognition more on the level of reason and knowledge than on the sensory level alone: He was cognizant of their drawbacks.
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