Definitionn. a distinguishing feature of your personal nature
Last update: May 12, 2016
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Perseverance is a good trait that one should possess. [noun]
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Individuals with sickle cell trait, although generally asymptomatic, can develop symptoms of sickling if exposed to very low oxygen pressures. [noun]
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The common trait is that they are all mothers or someone 's favorite auntie. [noun]
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The most important thing they have acquired--a rare trait with ordinary school children--is the love of study, the desire to know, to be informed. [noun]
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She rigidly exacted from other women the chaste reserve which was a marked trait in her own character. [noun]
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The youthful trait is to take kindly to a clutter of unfinished tasks. [noun]
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But with all this most unfavourable exterior, there was one trait in the features of both which argued alertness and intelligence in the most uncommon degree. [noun]
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It is an adult trait to stick to a task, even though a very long one, until it is accomplished. [noun]
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But here comes in another trait; it is found, though his angles are of so generous contents, the lines do not meet; the apex is not quite defined. [noun]
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Of late he had exhibited a new trait that tormented Princess Mary more than anything else; this was his ever-increasing intimacy with Mademoiselle Bourienne. [noun]
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Every trait and every movement of the Tsar's seemed to him enchanting. [noun]
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