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abstinence
[ ab-stuh-nuhns ]
noun
- forbearance, especially habitual forbearance as a lifestyle choice, from any indulgence of a particular appetite, such as from sex or from the use of alcoholic beverages:
The program promotes sexual abstinence for teens, but also provides information on contraception in case they become sexually active.
Synonyms: abstemiousness, teetotalism, sobriety
- any self-restraint, self-denial, or forbearance.
- the act of abstaining for any length of time from a substance or activity to which one has become addicted, but without actually dealing with the root causes of dependency: sobriety ( def 3 ).
Abstinence addresses the symptoms of addiction, while sobriety has deeper mental and emotional dimensions.
- the act of abstaining from a particular substance or activity as a spiritual discipline, as during Lent or some other period of religious fasting or self-denial:
At one time Lenten abstinence from meat was stricter than it is today.
- Economics. the conserving of current income in order to build up capital or savings.
abstinence
/ ˈæbstɪnəns /
noun
- the act or practice of refraining from some action or from the use of something, esp alcohol
- RC Church the practice of refraining from specific kinds of food or drink, esp from meat, as an act of penance
Derived Forms
- ˈabstinent, adjective
Other Words From
- ab·sti·nent adjective
- pro·ab·sti·nence adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of abstinence1
Word History and Origins
Origin of abstinence1
Example Sentences
We see detoxing as a path to transcendence, a symbol of modern urban virtue and self-transformation through abstinence.
Worse, some schools preach abstinence only or offer little to no sexual education.
Dr. Melson says abstinence only training shows no delay in sexual activity.
Meanwhile, the majority of states require sex educators to stress abstinence.
Also known as The Abstinence-Violation Effect, some individuals can feel an overall loss of control after going off the deep-end.
“Abstinence has its drawbacks,” he said, shivering in the bitter wind which whirled the stinging smoke about them.
I—perhaps— His hand closed over her fingers with the nervous tension that these last days of abstinence had brought him.
Cooked in the ashes, it makes a palatable but tough cake, which we enjoyed after our long abstinence from bread.
It is abstinence from evil quite as much as eager realization of good.
Convalescence from a severe sickness is a just cause for sexual abstinence.
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