Рет қаралды 240
I used to hear you but now I can not: an urbanization case in Istanbul
The titles of the sections have been selected based on the etymological origins of the words.
Nostalgia (n.)
1770, "morbid longing to return to one's home or native country, severe homesickness considered as a disease," "homesickness" (1688, German) From Greek algos "pain, grief, distress" (see -algia) "homecoming," from neomai "to reach some place, escape, return, get home," "food for a journey," Sanskrit nasate "approaches, joins," German genesen "to recover," Gothic ganisan "to heal," Old English genesen "to recover").
Transferred sense (the main modern one) of "wistful yearning for the past" is recorded by 1920, perhaps from such use of nostalgie in French literature
Interview I
Power (n.)
c. 1300, "ability; ability to act or do; strength, vigor, might,"
Interview II.
Feeling (n.)
Meaning "what one feels (about something), opinion" is from mid-15c. Meaning "capacity to feel" is from 1580s.
Interview III.
Hear (v.)
hear: old English heran (Anglian), "to hear, perceive by the ear, listen (to), obey, follow; accede to, grant; judge."
Interview IV.
Nostalgia [Ending Theme]