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Showing results for intemperance. Search instead for intrigerande.
Definitions

intemperance

[in-tem-per-uhns, -pruhns] / ɪnˈtɛm pər əns, -prəns /
NOUN
insobriety
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

As evidence of Mr. Kitman’s prodigious research into Washington’s intemperance, he cited a mention that the general had gained 28 pounds during the war, which lasted more than seven years.

From New York Times • Jun. 29, 2023

Usually such a judgment is the result of hyperbole and intemperance.

From Washington Post • May 2, 2022

Some spats are sparked by the jealousy of older moderates; others by the intemperance of younger progressives.

From Salon • Aug. 6, 2019

As reformers made progress against ills like intemperance, they increasingly saw the moral blindness and cruelty of slavery as the greatest and most intractable obstacles to American improvement.

From Textbooks • Jan. 18, 2018

I was there—on the very rim of our age— when my mother’s cataclysmic intemperance, as you well know, catapulted me into the fever of contemporary existence.

From "A Confederacy of Dunces" by John Kennedy Toole




Vocabulary lists containing intemperance