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Frailty   /frˈeɪlti/   Listen
Frailty

noun
(pl. frailties)
1.
The state of being weak in health or body (especially from old age).  Synonyms: debility, feebleness, frailness, infirmity, valetudinarianism.
2.
Moral weakness.  Synonym: vice.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Frailty" Quotes from Famous Books



... countless times that these [Greek: hetairai] were a mentally superior class of women, and on the strength of this information I assumed, in Romantic Love and Personal Beauty (79), that, notwithstanding their frailty, they may have been able, in some cases, to inspire a more refined, spiritual sort of love than the uneducated domestic women. A study of the original sources has now convinced me that this was a mistake. Aspasia no doubt was a remarkable woman, but she stands entirely by herself, ...
— Primitive Love and Love-Stories • Henry Theophilus Finck

... first part of his "Hymn to Intellectual Beauty" Shelley dwells on the inconstancy and evanescence of the manifestation of beauty, which imparts to it an appearance of frailty and unreality: ...
— Creative Unity • Rabindranath Tagore

... there the wish that his wife should be as worldly-wise and as eager to please as the married lady whose charms had held his fancy through two mildly agitated years; without, of course, any hint of the frailty which had so nearly marred that unhappy being's life, and had disarranged his own plans for a ...
— The Age of Innocence • Edith Wharton

... conditions of existence at Newport demand the exposure of every frailty and every folly; the skeleton must sit at the feast. There is no room for gossip where the facts are known. Nothing is whispered; the megaphone carries the tale. What a ghastly society, where no amount of finery hides the bald, the literal ...
— Two Thousand Miles On An Automobile • Arthur Jerome Eddy

... which will not be in season until the third or fourth generation, if it lasts so long. His very creation supposes him nothing before, and as tailors rose by the fall of Adam, and came in, like thorns and thistles, with the curse, so did he by the frailty of his master. His very face is his gentleman-usher, that walks before him in state, and cries "Give way!" He is as stiff as if he had been dipped in petrifying water and turned into his own statue. He is always taking the name of his honour in vain, and will rather damn it like ...
— Character Writings of the 17th Century • Various


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