stoic \ STOH-ik \
noun
: one apparently
or professedly indifferent to pleasure or pain
EXAMPLES:
Stoic that she is,
Edra finished the marathon despite a painful pulled tendon in her knee.
"Pitchers can
be stoics. They usually say not getting a win because of offensive shortcomings
does not bother them." ...
— Gerry Fraley, Dallas Morning News, May 4, 2014
DID YOU KNOW?
Zeno of Citium,
born in Cyprus in the 4th century B.C.E., traveled to Athens while a young man
and studied with the important philosophers of the day, among them two
influential Cynics. He eventually arrived at his own philosophy and began
teaching at a public hall called the Stoa Poikile. Zeno's philosophy, Stoicism,
took its name from the hall where he taught, and it preached self-control,
fortitude, and justice; passion was seen as the cause of all evil. By the 14th
century, English speakers had adopted the word "stoic" as a general
term for anyone who could face adversity calmly and without excess emotion. By
the 15th century, we'd also begun using it as an adjective meaning "not
affected by or showing passion or feeling."
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