SUBSTANCE - 13 definitions found
Websters 1828 Dictionary 
Substance SUB'STANCE, n. [L. substantia, substo; sub and sto,
to stand.] 1. In a general sense, being; something existing by
itself; that which really is or exists; equally applicable to matter
or spirit. Thus the soul of man is called an immaterial substance,
a cogitative substance, a substance endued with thought. We say, a
stone is a hard substance, tallow is a soft substance. 2. That which
supports accidents. That which subsists by itself is called substance;
that which subsists in and by another, is called a mode or manner of
being. 3. The essential part; the main or material part. In this
epitome, we have the substance of the whole book. This edition is the
same in substance with the Latin. 4. Something real, not imaginary;
something solid, not empty. Heroic virtue did his actions guide,
And he the substance, not th' appearance chose. 5. Body; corporeal
nature or matter. The qualities of plants are more various than
those of animal substances. 6. Goods; estate; means of living. Job's
substance was seven thousand sheep, three thousand camels, etc. Job 1.
We are--exhausting our substance, but not for our own interest.
WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) 
substance
n 1: the real physical matter of which a person or thing
consists; "DNA is the substance of our genes"
2: the choicest or most essential or most vital part of some
idea or experience; "the gist of the prosecutor's argument";
"the heart and soul of the Republican Party"; "the nub of the
story" [syn: kernel, substance, core, center,
centre, essence, gist, heart, heart and soul,
inwardness, marrow, meat, nub, pith, sum, nitty-
gritty}]
3: the idea that is intended; "What is the meaning of this
proverb?" [syn: meaning, substance]
4: material of a particular kind or constitution; "the immune
response recognizes invading substances"
5: considerable capital (wealth or income); "he is a man of
means" [syn: means, substance]
6: what a communication that is about something is about [syn:
message, content, subject matter, substance]
7: a particular kind or species of matter with uniform
properties; "shigella is one of the most toxic substances
known to man"
English Etymology Dictionary 
substance
13c., from O.Fr. substance, from L. substantia "being, essence, material,"
from substans, prp. of substare "stand firm, be under or present,"
from sub "up to, under" + stare "to stand." A loan-translation of
Gk. hypostasis. Sense of "possessions, means, wealth" first recorded
early 14c.
English Language Idioms 
substance
ˈsʌbstəns See: IN SUBSTANCE.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Edition (2003) 
substance noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin
substantia, from substant-, substans, present participle of
substare to stand under, from sub- + stare to stand
— more at stand Date: 14th century 1.
a. essential nature ; essence b. a fundamental or
characteristic part or quality c. Christian Science god 1b
2. a. ultimate reality that underlies all outward
manifestations and change b. practical importance ; meaning,
usefulness <the…bill—which will be without substance
in the sense that it will authorize nothing more than a set of ideas —
Richard Reeves>
3. a. physical material from which something is made or
which has discrete existence b. matter of particular or definite
chemical constitution c. something (as drugs or alcoholic beverages)
deemed harmful and usually subject to legal restriction <possession
of a controlled substance> <substance abuse>
4. material possessions ; property <a family of
substance> • substanceless adjective
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
substance n. 1 a the essential material, esp. solid, forming a thing (the substance was transparent). b a particular kind of material having uniform properties (this substance is salt). 2 a
reality; solidity (ghosts have no substance). b seriousness or steadiness of character (there is no substance in him). 3 the theme or subject of esp. a work of art, argument, etc. (prefer the
substance to the style). 4 the real meaning or essence of a thing. 5 wealth and possessions (a woman of substance). 6 Philos. the essential nature underlying phenomena, which is subject to
changes and accidents. Phrases and idioms: in substance generally; apart from details. Etymology: ME f. OF f. L substantia (as SUB-, stare stand)
English Explanatory Dictionary 
substance
ˈsʌbstəns n. 1 a the essential material, esp. solid, forming a
thing (the substance was transparent). b a particular kind of material having
uniform properties (this substance is salt). 2 a reality; solidity (ghosts
have no substance). b seriousness or steadiness of character (there is no
substance in him). 3 the theme or subject of esp. a work of art, argument,
etc. (prefer the substance to the style). 4 the real meaning or essence of a
thing. 5 wealth and possessions (a woman of substance). 6 Philos. the essential
nature underlying phenomena, which is subject to changes and accidents. øin
substance generally; apart from details. [ME f. OF f. L substantia (as SUB-,
stare stand)]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Substance \Sub"stance\, v. t.
To furnish or endow with substance; to supply property to; to
make rich. [Obs.]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Substance \Sub"stance\, n. [F., fr. L. substantia, fr. substare
to be under or present, to stand firm; sub under + stare to
stand. See Stand.]
1. That which underlies all outward manifestations;
substratum; the permanent subject or cause of phenomena,
whether material or spiritual; that in which properties
inhere; that which is real, in distinction from that which
is apparent; the abiding part of any existence, in
distinction from any accident; that which constitutes
anything what it is; real or existing essence.
These cooks, how they stamp, and strain, and grind,
And turn substance into accident! --Chaucer.
Heroic virtue did his actions guide, And he the
substance, not the appearance, chose. --Dryden.
2. The most important element in any existence; the
characteristic and essential components of anything; the
main part; essential import; purport.
This edition is the same in substance with the
Latin. --Bp. Burnet.
It is insolent in words, in manner; but in substance
it is not only insulting, but alarming. --Burke.
3. Body; matter; material of which a thing is made; hence,
substantiality; solidity; firmness; as, the substance of
which a garment is made; some textile fabrics have little
substance.
4. Material possessions; estate; property; resources.
And there wasted his substance with riotous living.
--Luke xv. 13.
Thy substance, valued at the highest rate, Can not
amount unto a hundred marks. --Shak.
We are destroying many thousand lives, and
exhausting our substance, but not for our own
interest. --Swift.
5. (Theol.) Same as Hypostasis, 2.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia 
SUBSTANCE
sub'-stans (rekhush; hupostasis): Lit. that which stands under, is in the
Bible used chiefly of material goods and possessions. In the Old Testament it
is the translation of numerous Hebrew words, of which rekhush, "that which is
gathered together," is one of the earliest and most significant (Ge 12:5;
13:6; 15:14; 1Ch 27:31; Ezr 8:21, etc.). In the New Testament "substance"
appears in a few passages as the translation of ousia, "being," "subsistence"
(Lu 15:13), huparxis, "goods," "property" (Heb 10:34),
huparchonta, "things at hand" (Lu 8:3). Special interest attaches
to Heb 11:1, the King James Version "Now faith is the substance of
things hoped for," etc., where the word is used in its proper etymological
sense as the translation of hupostasis, "that which stands under." the
Revised Version (British and American) changes to "assurance," margin "the
giving substance to," which last seems best to bring out the idea of faith as
that which makes the things hoped for real to the soul. The same Greek word
hupostasis is rendered "substance" in Heb 1:3 the Revised Version
(British and American), instead of the King James Version "person," with
reference to Christ, "the very image (margin "impress") of his substance,"
i.e. of God's invisible essence or being, the manifestation of God Himself.
W. L. Walker
Soule\'s Dictionary of English Synonyms 
substance
n.
1. Substratum, groundwork, reality, hypostasis, substantiality, essential nature,
real being, real existence.
2. Meaning, import, significance, essence, pith, gist, soul, chief part, essential part,
vital part.
3. Body, matter, material, texture, stuff.
4. Property, wealth, means, estate.
5. (Theol.) Divine essence, divine being.
English Explanatory Dictionary (Synonyms) 
substance
ˈsʌbstəns n.
1 material, matter, stuff; fabric, composition, make-up: She couldn't recognize the
substance in the bottle. The comet's substance is mainly ice and dirt.
2 essence, pith, heart, core, gist, burden, theme, meat, kernel, nub, crux, sum total,
sum and substance, point, gravamen, haecceity, quintessence, quiddity: Explain, in 500 or fewer
words, the substance of Hegel's dispute with Kant.
3 meaning, import, significance, purport, signification, point: Our visit to San Francisco
gave substance to all we had read about it.
4 reality, corporeality, solidity, actuality, concreteness: You must learn to deal with
the substance, not the shadows.
5 means, wealth, property, possessions, riches, resources, affluence, assets: John Culver
was a citizen of some substance in this town.
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 
308 Moby Thesaurus words for "substance":
Swiss bank account, actuality, affective meaning, affluence, air,
amount, amplitude, assets, atom, atomic particles, atoms, axiom,
balance, bank account, basis, bearing, being, bench mark,
best part, better part, body, bottom, bottom dollar,
bottomless purse, brute matter, budget, building block,
bulging purse, bulk, burden, call, cardinal point, case,
cash reserves, cause, center, chapter, checking account,
chemical element, chief thing, climax, coloring, command of money,
component, composition, concern, concreteness, connotation,
consequence, constituent, core, cornerstone, corporeality, corpus,
crisis, critical point, crux, denotation, density, distillate,
distillation, drift, durability, earth, easy circumstances, effect,
element, elementary particle, elementary unit, elixir,
embarras de richesses, entity, essence, essential,
essential matter, essentiality, exchequer, extension, extent,
fabric, finances, fire, firmness, flower, focus,
focus of attention, focus of interest, force, fortune, foundation,
fund, fundamental, fundamental particle, funds, generality, gist,
gold, good reason, grammatical meaning, gravamen, great point,
ground, grounds, handsome fortune, head, heading, heart,
high income, high point, high tax bracket, hyle, hypostasis, idea,
impact, implication, import, important thing, independence,
individual, inner essence, intension, issue, kernel, keystone,
kitty, landmark, lexical meaning, life savings, literal meaning,
living issue, lucre, luxuriousness, magnitude, main body,
main point, main thing, major part, majority, mammon, marrow, mass,
material, material basis, material point, material resources,
material wealth, material world, materiality, materials, materiel,
matter, matter in hand, meaning, meaningfulness, means, measure,
measurement, meat, medium, milestone, molecule, monad, money,
money to burn, moneybags, moneys, most, motif, motive,
natural world, nature, nest egg, nub, nubbin, nucleus, numbers,
nuts and bolts, object, opulence, opulency, overtone, palpability,
pecuniary resources, pelf, pertinence, physical world, pith, pivot,
plenum, plurality, pocket, point, point at issue,
point in question, ponderability, pool, possessions, postulate,
practical consequence, principle, problem, property, prosperity,
prosperousness, purport, purse, quantity, quantum, question, quid,
quiddity, quintessence, quintessential, range of meaning,
raw material, real issue, real meaning, reality, reason, recap,
recapitulation, reference, referent, relation, relevance, reserves,
resources, resume, riches, richness, right, rubric, run-through,
rundown, salient point, sap, savings, savings account, scope,
semantic cluster, semantic field, sense, short, significance,
signification, significatum, signifie, sine qua non, solidity,
soul, soundness, span of meaning, spirit, stability, staple,
steadiness, stock, store, stoutness, strength, structural meaning,
stuff, sturdiness, subject, subject matter, subject of thought,
substances, substantiality, substantialness, substantive point,
substratum, sum, sum and substance, sum total, summary, summation,
supply, symbolic meaning, tangibility, tangible, tenor, text,
the bottom line, the four elements, the nitty-gritty, the point,
theme, thrust, topic, totality of associations, toughness,
transferred meaning, treasure, turning point, unadorned meaning,
undertone, unit of being, unregistered bank account, upper bracket,
upshot, value, warrant, water, wealth, wealthiness, wherewithal,
whole, worth
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