"Supplication" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A request or prayer made to a higher power or a person in a position of authority, typically in a respectful and humble manner.
Example: "She offered a heartfelt supplication to God for strength and guidance."
Etymology: From the Latin "supplicare", meaning "to humiliate oneself" or "to beg for mercy".
In a broader sense, it can also refer to a plea or a petition made to someone in a position of authority, often in a situation of need or hardship.
Example: "The homeless person made a supplication to the charity organization for food and shelter."
Suppliants are individuals who are in a position of begging or pleading for something, often due to their desperate circumstances. They are usually those who are seeking help, mercy, or protection from someone who has authority, wealth, or influence.<br><br>In a broader sense, suppliants can also refer to people who are seeking something, such as a right, a privilege, or a favor, and are submitting themselves to the will or mercy of another.<br><br>For example, ancient suppliants in Greek mythology would often seek asylum or protection from a temple or a king, placing themselves under the sacred protection of that place or person.<br><br>In modern English, the word "suppliant" can evoke a sense of vulnerability, necessity, and sometimes, desperation.
A person who is asking for or seeking something, usually from a higher authority, such as a court or a church.
Supplications refer to humble and often urgent requests or prayers, typically made to a higher power or a person of authority, asking for something, either for oneself or others.
Someone or something that supplies or provides something, especially food, especially in a hospital or prison.
People or companies that provide goods or services to others, often to manufacturers, wholesalers, or retailers.
Refers to the economic theory that a country's economic growth and prosperity depend primarily on the factors that influence the production and supply of goods and services, such as taxes, regulations, and incentives, rather than the demand (demand-side) from consumers.