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Lenience   Listen
Lenience

noun
1.
Mercifulness as a consequence of being lenient or tolerant.  Synonyms: leniency, lenity, mildness.
2.
A disposition to yield to the wishes of someone.  Synonyms: indulgence, leniency.
3.
Lightening a penalty or excusing from a chore by judges or parents or teachers.  Synonym: leniency.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Lenience" Quotes from Famous Books



... strengthened in his moral tone (as his wife found out) by being compelled to discharge the least pleasant of the duties of a county sheriff—or if not a fine thing, at least it was a wholesome and durable corrective to all excess of lenience, that duty to his country and mankind compelled the gentle Scuddy to conduct the ...
— Springhaven - A Tale of the Great War • R. D. Blackmore

... philanthropic was strengthened in his moral tone (as his wife found out) by being compelled to discharge the least pleasant of the duties of a county sheriff—or if not a fine thing, at least it was a wholesome and durable corrective to all excess of lenience, that duty to his country and mankind compelled the gentle Scuddy to conduct the western division ...
— Springhaven - A Tale of the Great War • R. D. Blackmore

... of help in visualizing and understanding that direct and forceful epoch, and may even suggest some lenience in considering a Pope's carnal paternity. To those to whom the point of view of the Renaissance does not promptly suggest itself from this plain statement of fact, all unargued as we leave it, we recommend a perusal of Gianpietro de Crescenzi's ...
— The Life of Cesare Borgia • Raphael Sabatini

... his abrupt refusal of Ocock's offer. There was nothing unusual in this: he never took advice well; and, was it forced upon him, nine times out of ten a certain inborn contrariness drove him to do just the opposite. Besides, he had not yet learned to look with lenience on the rage for speculation that had seized the people of Ballarat; and he held that it would be culpable for a man of his slender means to risk money in the great game.—But was there any hint of risk in the present instance? To judge from Ocock's manner, the investment was as safe as a house, ...
— Australia Felix • Henry Handel Richardson



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