steadfast gaze
1steadfast — steadfastly, adv. steadfastness, n. /sted fast , fahst , feuhst/, adj. 1. fixed in direction; steadily directed: a steadfast gaze. 2. firm in purpose, resolution, faith, attachment, etc., as a person: a steadfast friend. 3. unwavering, as… …
2steadfast — stead•fast or stedfast [[t]ˈstɛdˌfæst, ˌfɑst, fəst[/t]] adj. 1) fixed in direction; steadily directed: a steadfast gaze[/ex] 2) firm in purpose, resolution, faith, etc.: a steadfast friend[/ex] 3) unwavering, as resolution, faith, or adherence 4) …
3steadfast — /ˈstɛdfast / (say stedfahst), / fəst/ (say fuhst) adjective 1. fixed in direction; steadily directed: a steadfast gaze. 2. firm in purpose, resolution, faith, attachment, etc., as a person. 3. unwavering, as resolution, faith, adherence, etc. 4.… …
4The Steadfast Tin Soldier — Infobox Book | name = The Steadfast Tin Soldier title orig = Den Standhaftige Tinsoldat translator = image caption = Illustration by Vilhelm Pedersen author = Hans Christian Andersen country = Denmark language = Danish series = genre = Fairy tale …
5stead´fast|ness — stead|fast «STEHD fast, fahst, fuhst», adjective. 1. loyal; unwavering; not changing; firm of purpose: »Benjamin Franklin was a steadfast servant of his country. SYNONYM(S): unswerving. 2. firmly fixed; not moving: »a steadfast gaze. By its own… …
6stead´fast|ly — stead|fast «STEHD fast, fahst, fuhst», adjective. 1. loyal; unwavering; not changing; firm of purpose: »Benjamin Franklin was a steadfast servant of his country. SYNONYM(S): unswerving. 2. firmly fixed; not moving: »a steadfast gaze. By its own… …
7stead|fast — «STEHD fast, fahst, fuhst», adjective. 1. loyal; unwavering; not changing; firm of purpose: »Benjamin Franklin was a steadfast servant of his country. SYNONYM(S): unswerving. 2. firmly fixed; not moving: »a steadfast gaze. By its own weight made… …
8Jasper Rootham — Jasper St John Rootham (21 November 1910 August 1990), was a civil servant, soldier, central banker, merchant banker, writer and poet.BiographyJasper Rootham was born on 21 November, 1910 in Cambridge, UK.Childhood and adolescenceRootham was an… …
9pathetic fallacy — the endowment of nature, inanimate objects, etc., with human traits and feelings, as in the smiling skies; the angry sea. [coined by John Ruskin in Modern Painters Vol. III, Part IV (1856)] * * * ▪ figure of speech poetic practice of… …
10ἀπόβλεμμα — steadfast gaze neut nom/voc/acc sg …