Pronoia

//pɹəʊˈnɔɪə//

Synonyms for "pronoia"

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

4 relation types

Translations

26 translations across 21 languages.

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Ancient Greek

2 entries
  • πρόνοιᾰ noun (divine providence, foreknowledge, foresight — see also foreknowledge, providence)
  • πρόνοιᾰ noun (imperial grant)

Bulgarian

1 entries
  • прония noun (imperial grant)

Czech

1 entries
  • pronie noun (imperial grant)

Finnish

1 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)

French

2 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)
  • pronoïa noun (belief that people conspire to do one good)

German

1 entries
  • Pronoia noun (imperial grant)

Greek

2 entries
  • πρόνοια noun (divine providence, foreknowledge, foresight — see also foreknowledge, providence)
  • πρόνοια noun (imperial grant)

Hebrew

1 entries
  • פרונויה noun (belief that people conspire to do one good)

Italian

1 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)

Japanese

1 entries
  • プロノイア noun (imperial grant)

Latin

1 entries
  • pronoea noun (divine providence, foreknowledge, foresight — see also foreknowledge, providence)

Lithuanian

1 entries
  • pronija noun (imperial grant)

Persian

1 entries
  • پرونویا noun (belief that people conspire to do one good)

Polish

1 entries
  • pronoja noun (imperial grant)

Portuguese

1 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)

Romanian

1 entries
  • pronoia noun (belief that people conspire to do one good)

Russian

1 entries
  • про́ния noun (imperial grant)

Serbo-Croatian

2 entries
  • prȏnija noun (imperial grant)
  • пронија noun (imperial grant)

Slovene

1 entries
  • pronoja noun (imperial grant)

Spanish

2 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)
  • pronoia noun (belief that people conspire to do one good)

Turkish

1 entries
  • pronoia noun (imperial grant)

Sample sentences

9 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

Now Providence (which the Greekes call Pronoia) is an intellectuall knowledge, both fore-ſeeing, caring for, and ordering all things, and doth not onely behold all paſt, all present, and all to come, but is the cauſe of their ſo being, which Preſcience (ſimply taken) is not: and therefore Providence by the Philoſophers (ſaith S. Auguſtine) is divided into Memory, Knowledge, and Care: […]

Source: wiktionary

[page 320] 'And make no provision for the flesh.' [Romans 13:14] 'Provision.' [footnote: Προνοια.] The word implies a forecasting of the mind; and the prohibition therefore is against all deliberation or devising of means or expedients for the gratification of our lusts. […] [page 321] He is a confirmed and advanced learner in the school of wickedness, who can thus in his cooler moments bestow care and calculation on such an enterprise, and in short make a study of the likeliest methods for securing to himself te enjoyment of unhallowed pleasures; and this is the pronoia, the unholy providence, if it may be so termed, on which our text lays its interdict. But it is not against all pronoia, all respect to things future, even though the futurities of this life, that the Bible warns us.

Source: wiktionary

The development of the Roman State, therefore, a world-process whose magnitude is truly wonderful, was not brought about as though a drifting mass of elements, by some outward force or inherent affinity became consolidated to revolve at random without any end or aim in that divine pronoia under which the ages move.

Source: wiktionary

The earlier history of the concept of providence is to be seen in the emergence, from Diogenes to Aristotle, of a notion of an intelligent purpose (telos, q.v.) operating in the universe. In all of these thinker it is clearly associated with the intelligent God whose features begin to appear in the later Plato (see Laws 899 where the denial of pronoia is reckoned blasphemy) and in Aristotle. For the Stoics the immanent Logos governs all by nous and pronoia (D.L. vii, 138; SVF i, 176).

Source: wiktionary

Showing 4 of 9 available sentences.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.