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animó

Animæ is the Latin plural form of anima, meaning souls or life-principles. In Latin, anima refers to the breath, life, or soul that animates living beings, and animæ is the spelling variant often used in manuscripts and ecclesiastical or scholastic Latin to denote the plural of anima. In ordinary Latin grammar, anima is a first-declension feminine noun, and animæ appears as the common plural form in many medieval and early modern texts, typically written as animae in standard modern transcription.

In classical and medieval usage, animæ functions primarily as the plural for souls or spiritual beings. The

Philosophically, anima often designates the immaterial soul rather than mere vitality. In Aristotle and later scholastic

See also: anima mundi, anima (philosophy), soul, animation, linguistic variant animae.

term
occurs
in
religious,
philosophical,
and
literary
contexts,
where
it
can
denote
the
souls
of
humans,
animals,
or
spiritual
entities,
depending
on
the
passage.
Christian
writers
frequently
employ
animæ
in
prayers
or
doctrinal
expositions
about
the
afterlife,
judgment,
and
the
fate
of
souls,
while
ancient
authors
discuss
the
soul
as
the
life
principle
of
a
living
being.
thought,
discussions
of
the
soul
are
sometimes
structured
around
a
tripartite
model:
vegetative
(anima
vegetativa),
sensitive
(anima
sensitiva),
and
rational
(anima
rationalis).
The
compound
term
anima
mundi
appears
in
Neoplatonism
and
medieval
philosophy
to
denote
a
universal
or
world
soul
that
animates
the
cosmos.
The
Latin
term
thus
influenced
later
European
notions
of
vitality
and
personhood,
giving
rise
to
descendants
such
as
animate
and
animal.