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Part of W.C.T.U.
Answer for the clue "Part of W.C.T.U. ", 10 letters:
temperance
Alternative clues for the word temperance
Word definitions for temperance in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ A mature student, a former temperance lecturer had a problem of overcoming his style of eloquence in speaking. ▪ Antislavery, temperance and other favourite evangelical reform endeavours became an everyday part of evangelical ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. the trait of avoiding excesses [syn: moderation ] [ant: intemperance ] abstaining from excess [syn: sobriety ] the act of tempering
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Temperance is defined as moderation or voluntary self-restraint. It is typically described in terms of what an individual voluntarily refrains from doing. This includes restraint from retaliation in the form of non-violence and forgiveness, restraint from ...
Usage examples of temperance.
He believed true wisdom to be an attainable idea, and that the moral convictions of the mind, those eternal instincts of temperance, conscientiousness, and justice, implanted in it by the gods, could not deceive, if rightly interpreted.
Their serious and sequestered life, averse to the gay luxury of the age, inured them to chastity, temperance, economy, and all the sober and domestic virtues.
Lear signally exemplified, through every phase of passion, that temperance which should give it smoothness.
The English general wrote me a note asking me to sup with him, telling me that some Italians would be present, and this decided me to stay on, but I had to promise the doctor to observe strict temperance.
When he dined out he had to drink nothing but water, so as not to compromise his reputation for temperance.
Gossip had also reached Jennet that Mark was taking time to pay calls on Temperance Strelley, which put the maidservant in a foul mood to match that of her mistress.
We learn from Plato, that it was also necessary for the soul to be purified from every stain: and that the purification necessary was such as gave virtue, truth, wisdom, strength, justice, and temperance.
Mary was not considered a serious threat to any of the larger breweries, her Temperance Ale and Bitter Rosella had earned a reputation in the colony for their quality and some of the public houses not tied to the mainstream breweries now accepted Bitter Rosie by the barrel, which was a major boost to her production.
It pained Vok that it was so, now that his own years had taught him both temperance and wisdom, but he had neither the energy nor the inclination to change the order of things at such a late point in his own journey.
I was a Son of Malty and a member of several other Temperance Societies, and my wife she was a Dawter of Malty, an I sposed these fax would secoor me the infloonz and pertectiun of all the fust families.
In his months of serf-enforced temperance, he had forgotten the power of woti to draw out the hidden, to release things best boundto make hardened men bawl like mouseling infants.
Some of the photoplay people agree with this temperance sermon, and some of them do not.
Bear broke out a demijohn of popskull liquor and led the final bout of drinking, this being long before his later frequent vows of temperance.
Anyhow, Stires was a temperance man: he took only one or two drinks a day, and seldom went beyond a modest gin-fizz.
Think of Edward of Caernarvon, the first Prince of Wales, a perverse life, Pennyfeather, and an unseemly death, then the Tudors and the dissolution of the Church, then Lloyd George, the temperance movement, Noncomformity, and lust stalking hand in hand through the country, wasting and ravaging.