Lack of forbearance

  • 1Sino-Indian War — Part of Cold War …

    Wikipedia

  • 2impatience — n. 1. Disquietude, restlessness, uneasiness. 2. Vehemence, impetuosity, haste, eagerness, precipitation. 3. Lack of forbearance, want of patience, irritability, irritableness, heat, violence of temper …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 3Religious Toleration —     Religious Toleration     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Religious Toleration     Toleration in general signifies patient forbearance in the presence of an evil which one is unable or unwilling to prevent. By religious toleration is understood the… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 4MOSES — (Heb. מֹשֶׁה; LXX, Mōusēs; Vulg. Moyses), leader, prophet, and lawgiver (set in modern chronology in the first half of the 13th century B.C.E.). Commissioned to take the Israelites out of Egypt, Moses led them from his 80th year to his death at… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 5Hamer v. Sidway — ! bgcolor= 6699FF | Case Opinions | Hamer v. Sidway , 124 N.Y. 538, 27 N.E. 256 (N.Y. 1891), was a noted decision by the New York Court of Appeals (the highest court in the state), New York State, United States, written by Judge Alton Parker.… …

    Wikipedia

  • 6tolerance — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. toleration, allowance; moderation, temperance, endurance, forbearance, sufferance, laxity; clemency, leniency. See permission, feeling, inexcitability, liberality. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Open… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 7literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… …

    Universalium

  • 8Virtue — (Latin virtus ; Greek Polytonic|ἀρετή) is moral excellence. Personal virtues are characteristics valued as promoting individual and collective well being, and thus good by definition. The opposite of virtue is vice.Etymologically the word virtue… …

    Wikipedia

  • 9disuse — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Lack of use Nouns 1. disuse, forbearance, abstinence; obsoleteness, [planned] obsolescence; relinquishment; cessation, discontinuance; abandonment; castaway, throwaway, reject. Informal, cold storage.… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 10mercy — mercy, charity, grace, clemency, lenity are comparable when meaning the disposition to show compassion or kindness in one s treatment of others, especially of those who offend one and who are in one s power to punish or rebuke. Mercy implies… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms