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Interest

[ˈɪntrəst] · IN-trist · English · noun
positiveintensity: lowanticipation

The broad, mild feeling of attention and engagement drawn to something.

Definition

The broad, mild feeling of attention and engagement drawn to something — the baseline of the interest family.

Connotation & usage

The broadest and mildest member: the general state of having one's attention drawn to and held by something. Less specific than curiosity (interest aimed at finding out) and far weaker than fascination (absorbing captivation); unlike intrigue it needs no mysterious trigger. The neutral baseline the others intensify. Both a momentary state (“lost interest”) and a standing pursuit (“one of her interests”). It lacks the forward-looking, outcome-directed quality of hope or anticipation.

Senses & usage

The feeling

Attention, engagement, or appreciative regard drawn to something.

The emotional sense is comparatively late, attested by 1771.

Financial

A charge paid for the use of borrowed money (an interest rate).

This sense dates to the 1520s, originally distinguished from illegal usury.

A stake

A legal share, claim, or right in something (“a controlling interest”).

The earliest English sense, from the mid-15c.

Related words

Etymology

From Latin interest “it is of importance, it makes a difference” (literally “to be between”). Entered English mid-15c. meaning “legal claim; concern; advantage.”

How it has changed

A shift from legal/financial “concern, stake” to emotional “attention”: the legal sense is mid-15c., the money-lending sense 1520s, the “personal consideration” sense 1620s, and the emotional “feeling that something concerns one” only by 1771. No reliable recent-generation shift.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.