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Taciturnity   Listen
noun
Taciturnity  n.  Habitual silence, or reserve in speaking. "The cause of Addison's taciturnity was a natural diffidence in the company of strangers." "The taciturnity and the short answers which gave so much offense."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Taciturnity" Quotes from Famous Books



... sat smoking contemplatively. Answering the glance, the woodsman muttered "old tree fallin'," and resumed his passive contemplation of the sticks glowing keenly in the fire. The Boy, upon whom, as soon as he entered the wilderness, the taciturnity of the woodsfolk descended as a garment, said nothing, but scanned his companion's gaunt face with a ...
— The House in the Water - A Book of Animal Stories • Charles G. D. Roberts

... Zametoff saw what I had by me, and perhaps he can say whether I was in my right senses yesterday or whether I was delirious? Perhaps he will judge as to our quarrel." Nothing would have pleased him better than there and then to have strangled that gentleman, whose taciturnity and equivocal facial ...
— The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales • Various

... like Mr. Nicholls, and there were those with whom she came in contact while writing Miss Bronte's Life who were eager to fan that feeling in the usually kindly biographer. Mr. Nicholls himself did not work in the direction of conciliation. He was, as we shall see, a Scotchman, and Scottish taciturnity brought to bear upon the genial and jovial Yorkshire folk did not make for friendliness. Further, he would not let Mrs. Gaskell 'edit' and change The Professor, and here also he did wisely and well. He hated ...
— Charlotte Bronte and Her Circle • Clement K. Shorter

... loved solitude and silence, I am a great gossip with my friends, which arises, perhaps, from my seeing them but rarely. I atone for this loquacity by a year of taciturnity. I mutely recall my parted friends by correspondence. I resemble that class of people of whom Seneca speaks, who seize life in detail, and not by the gross. The moment I feel the approach of summer, I take a country-house ...
— The Sonnets, Triumphs, and Other Poems of Petrarch • Petrarch

... paused, and made a huge effort, finally conquering that taciturnity which was almost an affliction to him. "The reason I gave the other night to you and that chap Durnovo was honest enough, but I have another. I want to lie low for a few months, but I also want to make money. I'm as good as engaged to be married, and I find that I am not ...
— With Edged Tools • Henry Seton Merriman


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