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Weakness   /wˈiknəs/   Listen
Weakness

noun
1.
A flaw or weak point.  Synonym: failing.
2.
Powerlessness revealed by an inability to act.  Synonyms: helplessness, impuissance.
3.
The property of lacking physical or mental strength; liability to failure under pressure or stress or strain.  "The weakness of the span was overlooked until it collapsed"
4.
The condition of being financially weak.
5.
A penchant for something even though it might not be good for you.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Weakness" Quotes from Famous Books



... Garden, hesitating whether to go in, and often have I (knowing first that there was nothing I wished to see) assumed a virtue I did not possess, and pretending moral superiority, preached to Wilkie on the weakness of not resisting such temptations for the sake of our art and our duty, and marched him off to his studies, when he was longing ...
— All About Coffee • William H. Ukers

... regiments, those of Mountcashel, O'Brien, and Dillon, named after their commanders, and were sent to Savoy. The French aid to James in Ireland helped best in giving confidence to the raw Irish levies, but it was more than offset by the German troops brought over by William. The weakness, indecision, or worse, of James before Derry, his chicken-hearted failure to overwhelm Schomberg when he lay at his mercy before the arrival of William, ruined his chances. Remember that the Irish army, if defeated at the Boyne, was not broken, ...
— The Glories of Ireland • Edited by Joseph Dunn and P.J. Lennox

... another. They resemble a dog in a well, pawing to get free. When he has raised his upper parts above water, and every spectator imagines him disengaged, his lower parts drag him down again and sink him to the nose; he makes new efforts to emerge, and every effort increasing his weakness, only tends to sink ...
— A Book of English Prose - Part II, Arranged for Secondary and High Schools • Percy Lubbock

... up stairs to bed, Frank continued his aggravating allusions to Louis' weakness, but in so covert a manner, that no one but those acquainted with Louis' former history could have understood their import. For some time Reginald pretended not to hear them; there was a strong struggle within him, for his high spirit rose indignantly ...
— Louis' School Days - A Story for Boys • E. J. May

... set up profound changes in the mind that receives them. Thus the wrong conception of self-immolation will be faithfully worked out by the unconscious—and has been too often in the past—in terms of misery, weakness, or disease. We remember how the idea of herself as a victim of love worked physical destruction in Therese de L'Enfant Jesus: and we shall never perhaps know all the havoc wrought by the once fashionable doctrines of predestination and of the total ...
— The Life of the Spirit and the Life of To-day • Evelyn Underhill


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