Harper, Douglas. «existence». Online Etymology Dictionary. Consultado el 21 de octubre de 2018. «(...)from Medieval Latin "existentia"/"exsistentia", from "existentem"/"exsistentem" (nominative "existens"/"exsistens") "existent," present participle of Latin "existere"/"exsistere" "stand forth, come out, emerge; appear, be visible, come to light; arise, be produced; turn into," and, as a secondary meaning, "exist, be;" from ex "forth" (see "ex-") + "sistere" "cause to stand," (..)».
linguax.com
lexica.linguax.com
Forcellini, Egidio; Furlanetto, Giuseppe (1940 reimp.). «SISTO». Lexicon Totius Latinitatis(en latín). Digitalizado por Godmy. p. 390. «SISTO (...) B) "Sisto", neutrorum more vel absolute, tralaticium est, consistere, sedere, quiescere, "stare, fermarsi, posarsi". (...)».
Forcellini, Egidio; Furlanetto, Giuseppe. «STO». Op. cit. p. 495.
Forcellini, Egidio; Furlanetto, Giuseppe. «EXSISTO». Op. cit. p. 382. «EXSISTO vel "existo"(...) ("ex" et "sisto, sto"). (...) - Exsistere, ἐξέρχομαι, est exire, exeundo apparere, prodire ([...] Hisp. "salir, apparecer [sic], mostrarse") (...) II.) (...) ¶ 2. Item saepe ponitur pro "esse, apparere", (...)».
mecd.gob.es
Juan Domínguez Berrueta, La moda existencialista, Revista de Educación, 1950. Véase también Three Are the Perfection of Charity - The De Trinitate of Richard of St. Victor: Richard dissects the word "person" into two components: the mode of being, or nature, which one more generically or more specifically possesses; and the mode of obtaining being, or "obtention" (obtinentia), which is the principle of one's origin. Likewise, the word "existence" can be dissected: to "sist" (sistere) is to "be" in a given mode of being; to "ex-sist" (ex-) is to "be out from," to "be" with regard to the mode of origin of one' s being.60 To be a person solely by qualitative difference, solely by mode of being, is angelic personhood; to be a person solely by obtention, by "being out from," is divine personhood; to be a person according to both senses at once is human personhood.
paulburgess.org
Juan Domínguez Berrueta, La moda existencialista, Revista de Educación, 1950. Véase también Three Are the Perfection of Charity - The De Trinitate of Richard of St. Victor: Richard dissects the word "person" into two components: the mode of being, or nature, which one more generically or more specifically possesses; and the mode of obtaining being, or "obtention" (obtinentia), which is the principle of one's origin. Likewise, the word "existence" can be dissected: to "sist" (sistere) is to "be" in a given mode of being; to "ex-sist" (ex-) is to "be out from," to "be" with regard to the mode of origin of one' s being.60 To be a person solely by qualitative difference, solely by mode of being, is angelic personhood; to be a person solely by obtention, by "being out from," is divine personhood; to be a person according to both senses at once is human personhood.
rae.es
dle.rae.es
Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española. «existencia». Diccionario de la Lengua Española. Consultado el 21 de octubre de 2018. «'existencia' (...) Fil. Por oposición a esencia, realidad concreta de un ente cualquiera. (...)».
tufts.edu
perseus.tufts.edu
Lewis & Short (1879). «ex». A Latin Dictionary(en inglés). Oxford: Clarendon Press. Consultado el 21 de octubre de 2018. «IV. In composition (...)
B. Signification.
1. Primarily and most freq. of place, out or forth (...)».