Envy
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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+ | :''[[Portrait of a Woman Suffering from Obsessive Envy]]'' | ||
'''Envy''' is an [[emotion]], a [[resentment|resentful]] desire of something possessed by another or [[other]]s; [[hatred]], [[enmity]], ill-feeling; emulation; [[rivalry]]. | '''Envy''' is an [[emotion]], a [[resentment|resentful]] desire of something possessed by another or [[other]]s; [[hatred]], [[enmity]], ill-feeling; emulation; [[rivalry]]. | ||
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The word [[jealous]] is often used to describe an envious state. In its correct usage, jealousy is the fear of losing something to another person (a loved one in the prototypical form), while envy is the pain or frustration caused by another person having something that one does not have oneself. | The word [[jealous]] is often used to describe an envious state. In its correct usage, jealousy is the fear of losing something to another person (a loved one in the prototypical form), while envy is the pain or frustration caused by another person having something that one does not have oneself. | ||
- | In some cultures, envy is often associated with the color [[green]], as in "green with envy". The phrase "green-eyed monster" refers to an individual whose current actions appear [[Motivation|motivated]] by envy. This is based on a line from Shakespeare's ''[[Othello]]''. | + | In some cultures, envy is associated with the color [[green]], as in "green with envy". The phrase "green-eyed monster" refers to an individual whose current actions appear [[Motivation|motivated]] by envy. This is based on a line from Shakespeare's ''[[Othello]]''. |
Envy (Invidia) is one of the [[Seven Deadly Sins]]. | Envy (Invidia) is one of the [[Seven Deadly Sins]]. | ||
- | == In fiction == | + | ==Etymology== |
+ | From Middle English ''envie'', from Old French ''envie'', from Latin ''[[invidia]]'' (“envy”), from ''invidere'' (“to look at with malice”) from ''in'' + ''[[videre]]'' ("on, upon" + "to look, see"). Displaced native Middle English ''ande, onde'' (“envy”) (from Old English ''anda, onda'' (“breath, emotion, envy, hatred, grudge, dislike”)), Middle English ''nithe, nith'' (“envy, malice”) (from Old English ''nīþ'' (“[[envy]], [[hatred]], [[malice]], [[spite]], [[jealousy]]”)). | ||
+ | == Namesakes == | ||
*[[Envy (film)]], 2004 U. S. film by [[Ben Stiller]]. | *[[Envy (film)]], 2004 U. S. film by [[Ben Stiller]]. |
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Envy is an emotion, a resentful desire of something possessed by another or others; hatred, enmity, ill-feeling; emulation; rivalry.
The word jealous is often used to describe an envious state. In its correct usage, jealousy is the fear of losing something to another person (a loved one in the prototypical form), while envy is the pain or frustration caused by another person having something that one does not have oneself.
In some cultures, envy is associated with the color green, as in "green with envy". The phrase "green-eyed monster" refers to an individual whose current actions appear motivated by envy. This is based on a line from Shakespeare's Othello.
Envy (Invidia) is one of the Seven Deadly Sins.
Etymology
From Middle English envie, from Old French envie, from Latin invidia (“envy”), from invidere (“to look at with malice”) from in + videre ("on, upon" + "to look, see"). Displaced native Middle English ande, onde (“envy”) (from Old English anda, onda (“breath, emotion, envy, hatred, grudge, dislike”)), Middle English nithe, nith (“envy, malice”) (from Old English nīþ (“envy, hatred, malice, spite, jealousy”)).
Namesakes
- Envy (film), 2004 U. S. film by Ben Stiller.
See also
- Competition
- Jealousy
- Narcissism
- Penis envy
- Resentment
- Self-envy
- Seven deadly sins
- Spite (sentiment)
- Womb and vagina envy