| Serfism | |
| Selfish | a. They judge of things according to their own private appetites and selfish passions. Cudworth. [ 1913 Webster ] In that throng of selfish hearts untrue. Keble. [ 1913 Webster ] Hobbes and the selfish school of philosophers. Fleming. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Selfishly | adv. In a selfish manner; with regard to private interest only or chiefly. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Selfishness | n. The quality or state of being selfish; exclusive regard to one's own interest or happiness; that supreme self-love or self-preference which leads a person to direct his purposes to the advancement of his own interest, power, or happiness, without regarding those of others. [ 1913 Webster ] Selfishness, -- a vice utterly at variance with the happiness of him who harbors it, and, as such, condemned by self-love. Sir J. Mackintosh. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| selfish | (adj) เห็นแก่ตัว, See also: เห็นแก่ได้, เห็นแก่ประโยชน์ส่วนตัว, Syn. self-centered, greedy, mean, vain, egoistic |
| ใจแคบ | (adj) narrow-minded, See also: selfish, Ant. ใจแข็ง, Example: เขาเป็นคนใจแคบในเรื่องเล็กๆ น้อยๆ แต่เป็นคนใจกว้างในเรื่องใหญ่ๆโตๆ |
| เห็นแก่ตัว | [henkaētūa] (adj) EN: selfish FR: égoïste ; égocentrique |
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| selfish | (adj) concerned chiefly or only with yourself and your advantage to the exclusion of others; - Maria Weston Chapman, Ant. unselfish, Example: Selfish men were...trying to make capital for themselves out of the sacred cause of civil rights |
| selfishness | (n) stinginess resulting from a concern for your own welfare and a disregard of others, Ant. unselfishness |
| selfish person | (n) a person who is unusually selfish |