Definitionadj. conducive to or characteristic of physical or moral well- being
Last update: August 10, 2015
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Eat wholesome food. [adjective]
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My hope is that it conveys a wholesome goodness that can refresh Web sites with high quality design. [adjective]
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I discovered a whole tradition of esteem for leisure as something good, dynamic and wholesome - even holy. [adjective]
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Being of a wonderfully happy nature--for happiness is the greatest wonder in this world--he could not help many a wholesome laugh, in spite of all the projects of Napoleon. [adjective]
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However, Napoleon failed to see the matter in that wholesome light, and smiled a grim and unkind smile as he read Caryl Carne's report of those "left-handed and uncouth manoeuvres." [adjective]
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Dan knew that the future fair owner and duster designed by his mother was Miss Cheeseman, towards whom he had cherished tender yearnings in the sensible and wholesome days. [adjective]
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Peace was proclaimed, and peace was reigning; and the proper British feeling of contempt for snivelly Frenchmen, which produces the entente cordiale, had replaced the wholesome dread of them. [adjective]
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The fruit of all wholesome strife must be peace; let us pluck that fruit, Gorgo, and enjoy it together. [adjective]
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I know their voice is often rude and rough, but it utters wholesome truths, and no one needs to hear truth more than a king. [adjective]
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I give thee, therefore, only a few wholesome counsels, and only fear that though I offer them with my right hand, thou wilt accept them with the left. [adjective]
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"The criminal by passion is usually a man of wholesome birth and honest life, who under the stress of some great, unmerited wrong has wrought justice for himself." [adjective]
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