the way in which two or more concepts, objects, or people are connected, or the state of being connected
In our society relationship is assumed to imply romance, but I like to look beyond that idea. I like the definition from The Oxford Dictionary because it doesn't limit the word to romance.
I have a relationship with my home, my car, my bed, my feed, my computer, my blog. You get the idea. By limiting the word, relationship, to only people, we limit our understanding of the world.
This is a pet peeve of mine with the English language. We need more variety in our vocabulary to fully express ideas and concepts. I heard once that the Inuit people have 50 words for snow. That "fact" is up for debate, but it is true that variations on words help us understand more fully than a single word used repeatedly.
Here's what I do know about relationships -- they can be with objects, concepts, or people. They can be easy, difficult, complicated, confusing, and comforting. And we all need at least one solid relationship to help us keep moving forward.
I agree that we need a lot more words in the English language to express ideas. However, as a teacher of English to several Spanish-speakers in our city, it seems that English contains too many words at times! ha.
ReplyDeleteI think we condensed the 4 Greek words for love to one and the concept of relationship to only people. Maybe that's one of the reasons society has a hard time seeing any personal relationship without the possibility of sex. :(
ReplyDelete"We need more variety in our vocabulary to fully express ideas and concepts." Yes! Many times I have caught myself thinking or saying aloud a word in my dialect and then scrambling to find the English equivalent. But it just isn't the same. :) Relationships can be so tiring and time and energy consuming for an introvert :)
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