gestalt - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
Borrowed from German Gestalt (“shape, figure, form”).
gestalt (plural gestalts or gestalten)
- A collection of physical, biological, psychological or symbolic elements that creates a whole, unified concept or pattern which is other than the sum of its parts, due to the relationships between the parts (of a character, personality, entity, or being)
This biography is the first one to consider fully the writer's gestalt.- 1980, George Lakoff, Mark Johnson, chapter 15, in Metaphors We Live By:
Thus one activity, talking, is understood in terms of another, physical fighting. Structuring our experience in terms of such multidimensional gestalts is what makes our experience coherent. - 1996, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, The Origins of Grammar, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press:
... depending on the kinds of speech children hear directed to them, they may first learn unanalyzed "gestalts" (e.g., social expressions like "What's that?" uttered as a single unit) instead of learning single words that are then freely recombined ... - 2003 August, Jay Kirk, “Watching the Detectives”, in Harpers Magazine[1], volume 307, number 1839, page 61:
The clusters of behavioral gestalten... the probability factors... the subtypes of crimes... the constellations of criminal subtypes... - 2008, Jonathan Nasaw, Fear Itself:
Obviously it was related to the entire gestalt of Simon's polyphobia and compensatory counterphobia. The boys used to watch horror movies on late-night television […] - 1977, John L. Hess, Karen Hess, The Taste of America, New York: Grossman:
Mary did not approve of the Eleanor gestalt. "I been to Woonsocket S.D., Eleanor McGovern's hometown," she said, "and nobody there? I mean nobody? dresses like that." - 1998, David Foster Wallace, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, 1st Back Bay edition, Boston: Little, Brown and Co.:
So different were our appearances and approaches and general gestalts that we had something of an epic rivalry from '74 through '77.
- 1980, George Lakoff, Mark Johnson, chapter 15, in Metaphors We Live By:
Unadapted borrowing from German Gestalt (“shape, figure, form”).
gestalt (first-person possessive gestaltku, second-person possessive gestaltmu, third-person possessive gestaltnya)
- (psychology) gestalt: a collection of physical, biological, psychological or symbolic elements that creates a whole, unified concept or pattern which is other than the sum of its parts, due to the relationships between the parts (of a character, personality, entity, or being)
- “gestalt” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Borrowed from German Gestalt. Attested since 1623.
gestalt c
- a figure ((shape of a) being, especially a human or human-like being)
de centrala gestalterna i berättelsen
the central figures (characters) in the story
en lång gestalt skymtade i dimman
a tall figure could be seen through the mist - (more rarely, somewhat poetic) a shape, a form (more generally)
- a gestalt (a whole different from the sum of its parts)
More everyday-sounding compared to English gestalt in (sense 1), matching figure in tone as well.