US /kəmˈpænjənˌʃɪp/
・UK /kəmˈpæniənʃɪp/
A sign of companionship and social bonding.
For many, they are a lifeline, helping with anxiety, depression and loneliness by offering unconditional love, companionship and comfort in a way few creatures can.
If they disappeared, we'd lose not just their companionship, but also a wealth of genetic diversity that could have helped us in future medical and scientific discoveries.
Your mom looks like she could use some companionship.
Your mom looks like she could use some companionship.
Loneliness is simply a price we may have to pay for holding onto a sincere, ambitious view of what companionship must and could be.
round her by the companionship of a book, which she read by the dim glare of the embers.
And that distinguishes it from lust, which is generally fleeting, and also from more companionship love, which doesn't have that intensity of desire that you want to possess the other in some way.
Or D, empty, I often feel like I lack companionship.
You likely have connections, but there may be areas where you crave deeper emotional support or companionship.
But mirror neurons are just the beginning of a whole range of research going on in neuropsychology and brain research and in child development that suggests that we are actually softwired not for aggression and violence and self-interest and utilitarianism, that we are actually softwired for sociability, attachment, as John Bowlby might have said, affection, companionship, and
affection, companionship, and that the first drive is the drive to actually 'belong'.
'Women don't want sex they want companionship?'
sex, they just want companionship and that as
"I cannot desire companionship."
I cannot desire companionship.