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Facts of life   /fækts əv laɪf/   Listen
Facts of life

noun
1.
The sexual activity of conceiving and bearing offspring.  Synonyms: breeding, procreation, reproduction.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Facts of life" Quotes from Famous Books



... generalisation that is founded on a knowledge of and a delight in the variety of things is the end of all science and poetry. Keats said that he sought the principle of beauty in all things, and poems are in a sense simply beautiful generalisations. They subject the unclassified and chaotic facts of life to the order of beauty. The mystic, meditating on the One and the Many, is also in pursuit of a generalisation—the perfect generalisation of the universe. And what is science but the attempt to arrange in a series of generalisations ...
— The Pleasures of Ignorance • Robert Lynd

... and mental freshness, he would say good-by to his public before his public might decide to say good-by to him. So, at forty, he candidly faced the facts of life and began to prepare himself for his retirement at fifty under circumstances that would be of his own making ...
— A Dutch Boy Fifty Years After • Edward Bok

... art is in part a recognition of this fact; in part it is an effort to transform them into the forms of the aesthetic. Art celebrates, but also creates, this luxury of feeling, and war also in its own dramatic movement transforms ugly and plain facts of life by including them in ecstatic states, ...
— The Psychology of Nations - A Contribution to the Philosophy of History • G.E. Partridge

... not dare go home. An over-rigid standard of morals, an over-repressive policy, an over-righteous judgment, plus a mother ignorant of the facts of life, plus a girl's longing for joy—the sum of these equaled ruin in ...
— What eight million women want • Rheta Childe Dorr

... secret law according to which that nation whose sense of life is fullest and keenest, drifts most readily toward a mathematical rigidity of theory. Matter and form are the eternal oppositions, and the mathematical intellects are often attracted by the facts of life, just as the sensuous minds are often drawn toward the study of abstract law. Thus strangely enough, what we think we are is just what we are not: what we desire to be is what suits us least; our theories condemn us, and our practice gives the ...
— Amiel's Journal • Mrs. Humphry Ward


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