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stamina
1[ stam-uh-nuh ]
noun
- strength of physical constitution; power to endure disease, fatigue, privation, etc.
stamina
2[ stam-uh-nuh ]
noun
- a plural of stamen.
stamina
1/ ˈstæmɪnə /
stamina
2/ ˈstæmɪnə /
noun
- enduring energy, strength, and resilience
Derived Forms
- ˈstaminal, adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stamina1
Example Sentences
War,” wrote Clausewitz, “is an extreme trial of strength and stamina.
He says he believes it was good professional stamina that saved his life.
Even as we cheer for her stamina, we shrink from her rapacity.
He weighed only 185 pounds, but he had killer instincts and rabbit quickness and the stamina of a mule.
The amount of strength, flexibility, stamina, everything it takes to be a gymnast is insane.
Poor Mrs. Morton was a flimsy woman, without much stamina, mental or bodily.
Every man of them was marked for courage and stamina and wild daring.
Every one would become so corrupt and depraved sexually that the race would become weak and puny, with no moral stamina.
There are only two known species, and they vary in the number of their Stamina, and divisions of the Corolla.
But if Emetic could not spread-eagle the field, she could set a pace that would try the stamina and lungs of Pegasus.
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