Entrepreneurial vs Personhood - What's the difference?
entrepreneurial | personhood |
Having the spirit, attitude or qualities of an entrepreneur; enterprising.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=June 3
, author=Nathan Rabin
, title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Mr. Plow” (season 4, episode 9; originally aired 11/19/1992)
The state or period of being a person.
*
* 2014 , Christopher Watts, Relational Archaeologies: Humans, Animals, Things (page 101)
As an adjective entrepreneurial
is having the spirit, attitude or qualities of an entrepreneur; enterprising.As a noun personhood is
the state or period of being a person.entrepreneurial
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, page= , passage=Homer’s entrepreneurial spirit proves altogether overly infectious. Homer gives Barney a pep talk when he encounters him dressed up like a baby handing out fliers (Barney in humiliating costumes=always funny) and it isn’t long until Barney has purchased a truck of his own and set up shop as the Plow King.}}
personhood
English
Noun
(en noun)- [Animals] are conscious; they are subjectively aware; they have interests; they can suffer. No characteristic other than sentience is required for personhood .
- These examples reveal that the shared personhood of hunters and prey was mutually comprehensible, such that hunters could see the animalness of themselves and the humanness of prey, and prey could see the humanness of themselves