Your definitions was already corrupted to hide the connotation to motion. TEMPTA'TION, noun - "the act of tempting; solicitation of the passions; trial". It is the pull of flow that represents the temptation to the form within to ignore the need to struggle for self sustenance, and form representing a response to flow makes free will of choice over action a responsibility over ONEself within ALL aka a trial; a struggle; a balance act.
As pointed out before...opposition doesn't equal against; but coexistence within flow; which allows the balance of form in-between. Note; knowledge; perception refers to ALL potentiality communicating itself as flow to the potential of form.
CONNOTE, verb transitive [Latin, to mark. See Note.] - "to make known together; to imply; to denote or designate; to include". See how they once again took anything related to coexistence within motion out of the description; while slapping a suggested conflict (against) onto it?
TEMPTATION, noun (From Latin temptāre “to probe, feel, test, tempt”)
Your definitions was already corrupted to hide the connotation to motion. TEMPTA'TION, noun - "the act of tempting; solicitation of the passions; trial". It is the pull of flow that represents the temptation to the form within to ignore the need to struggle for self sustenance, and form representing a response to flow makes free will of choice over action a responsibility over ONEself within ALL aka a trial; a struggle; a balance act.
CONNOTATION, noun (From Latin con- "in opposition, against” + notāre "to note")
As pointed out before...opposition doesn't equal against; but coexistence within flow; which allows the balance of form in-between. Note; knowledge; perception refers to ALL potentiality communicating itself as flow to the potential of form.
CONNOTE, verb transitive [Latin, to mark. See Note.] - "to make known together; to imply; to denote or designate; to include". See how they once again took anything related to coexistence within motion out of the description; while slapping a suggested conflict (against) onto it?
OPPOSITION, noun (From Latin oppōnere “to set against”)