Definitionn. the quality of elevation of mind and exaltation of character or ideals or conduct
Last update: July 11, 2015
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The fall alone explains at once the nobleness and the meanness of humanity; Jesus Christ is the only solution in which the baffled reason can rest. [Please select]
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"Beatrice owes a great deal of her nobleness of heart and singleness of purpose to her mother." [Please select]
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His genius gives to it an air of nobleness and freedom. [Please select]
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There was a freedom in their subserviency, a nobleness in their very degradation. [Please select]
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, who ordered his bust to be executed in marble, "for the sake of the gravity and nobleness of his countenance." [Please select]
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Those who most condemn him acknowledge his nobleness and generosity of nature. [Please select]
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"He is so noble," she had cried--"he is so noble--and I so worship his nobleness--and I have been so base." [Please select]
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And who shall stand Since hireling tongue and alien hand Kill nobleness in all this land. [Please select]
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She would fit in anywhere--in the highest places, with her grace, and her nobleness of mind, arcadian, passionate and beautiful. [Please select]
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In a Spanish, as in an Italian, city, one usually enquires first for the Square, for whatever nobleness a place has is sure to be there. [Please select]
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