For the word is dialectical in itself and at the same time is integrated into the whole of existence. By this I mean that the word is intended to be lived.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The word 'living' has so many connotations that I'm almost reluctant to try to define it scientifically because it sounds as if I'm then downgrading all the other significances of that word.
Words are also seeds, and when dropped into the invisible spiritual substance, they grow and bring forth after their kind.
When we speak the word 'life,' it must be understood we are not referring to life as we know it from its surface of fact, but to that fragile, fluctuating center which forms never reach.
The real being of language is that into which we are taken up when we hear it - what is said.
Almost any word can be drafted to serve as a verb, even words we think of as eternal and unchanging, stuck in their more traditional roles.
Language, after all, is organic. You can't force words into existence. You can't force new meanings into words. And some words can't or won't or shouldn't be laundered or neutered. Language develops naturally.
Dialectic thought is an attempt to break through the coercion of logic by its own means.
Language expresses people's thinking and it was by a Word that God created the world and preserves it.
I still understand a few words in life, but I no longer think they make a sentence.
Whatever life may really be, it is to us an abstraction: for the word is a generalised term to signify that which is common to all animals and plants, and which is not directly operative in the inorganic world.