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Self-restraint   /sɛlf-rɪstrˈeɪnt/   Listen
Self-restraint

noun
1.
Exhibiting restraint imposed on the self.  Synonym: temperateness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Self-restraint" Quotes from Famous Books



... scrutiny of the Spaniard's eyes, it was no longer necessary for me to maintain that painful self-restraint which had cost me so severe an effort in order that I might not by look or gesture arouse the ghost of a suspicion as to my intentions; so, while I continued to mechanically wave the boat to the right or the left, as circumstances demanded, I now gave my mind ...
— A Pirate of the Caribbees • Harry Collingwood

... time she had ever called him by his Christian name and it went near to toppling down the carefully reared structure of self-restraint. But he made shift to shore the tottering walls with ...
— The Grafters • Francis Lynde

... learn, in this Pagan system of education, to press down his rising passions? What precept of positive virtue does he learn? What principle of self-restraint? What does he learn in such a school to make him obedient, honest, chaste, a good citizen, a good Christian? The common school system proceeds on the principle of suffering the passions of youth to take any development which fallen nature may bring about, and then trusting to ...
— Public School Education • Michael Mueller

... perhaps, you find that you have gone through this horror for nothing—the august court with its Roman Catholic judge throws out your petition, its suspicions having been excited by the fact that when you discovered your domestic tragedy, you sought to behave like a civilized person, with pity and self-restraint, instead of like a sultan in Turkey, or a basso in an ...
— The Profits of Religion, Fifth Edition • Upton Sinclair

... raise the whole man to the human stage, in which every intellectual and physical capacity shall subserve the purposes of the soul. From all this it follows that Theosophists should sound the note of self-restraint within marriage, and the gradual—for with the mass it cannot be sudden—restriction of the sexual relation to the perpetuation ...
— Annie Besant - An Autobiography • Annie Besant


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