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Parsimony   /pˈɑrsəmˌoʊni/   Listen
Parsimony

noun
1.
Extreme care in spending money; reluctance to spend money unnecessarily.  Synonyms: parsimoniousness, penny-pinching, thrift.



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"Parsimony" Quotes from Famous Books



... all virtues are convertible into vices, so in some cases did the best traits of these people degenerate. Their frugality too often became parsimony; their devotion grim bigotry; and all this in a greater degree perhaps than could be predicated of the more ...
— Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. II (of 2) • Herman Melville

... at a later period it was manifest that this was owing more to ill-will than to parsimony, because when Julian had given some small coin to one of the common soldiers, who, as was the custom, had asked for some to get shaved with, he was attacked for it with most insulting calumnies by Gaudentius, the secretary, ...
— The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus • Ammianus Marcellinus

... It is, in one way, miserable - for I can do no work; a very little wood-cutting, the newspapers, and a note about every two days to write, completely exhausts my surplus energy; even Patience I have to cultivate with parsimony. I see, if I could only get to work, that we could live here with comfort, almost with luxury. Even as it is, we should be able to get through a considerable time of idleness. I like the place immensely, though I have seen so little of it - I have only ...
— The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson - Volume 1 • Robert Louis Stevenson

... a single article of luxury in the house which he had not in some way got rid of. Parsimony reigned unchecked in the hotel Graslin. The master's face, greatly improved during the three years spent with his wife (who induced him to follow his physician's advice), now became redder, more fiery, more blotched than before. Business had taken such proportions ...
— The Village Rector • Honore de Balzac

... yourself into any contempt of me on that account. I know as well as you do my disadvantages in the world; I am as conscious as you are of my physical defects and shortcomings, my distorted spine, and the parsimony of nature in all particulars when she made me. But I have passions like other men; and I pursue them like other men, only, as I am shut out from the summary and open process, I am compelled, perchance, ...
— Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Volume 2, No. 12, May, 1851. • Various


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