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Sternness   /stˈərnnəs/  /stˈərnəs/   Listen
Sternness

noun
1.
The quality (as of scenery) being grim and gloomy and forbidding.
2.
Uncompromising resolution.  Synonym: strictness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Sternness" Quotes from Famous Books



... to her she was both daunted and disappointed; the gravity, amounting almost to sternness, with which Mrs. Fisher received her, and explained to her the duties she was expected to perform, awed in the first place, and mortified in the second. The establishment of this fashionable modiste, with which Myra had associated nothing but laces and ribbons, dresses and trimmings, embroidery ...
— Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Volume 1, No. 3, August, 1850. • Various

... brown, of the blue tinge of the white, and of the lustrous light that resided in them, but far more by their power of expression, sometimes so soft and melancholy, at other moments earnest, pleading, and almost flashing with eagerness. It was a good mouth too, perhaps a little inclined to sternness of mould about the jaw and chin; but that might have been partly from the absence of all softening roundness, aging the countenance for the time, just as illness had shrunk ...
— The Trial - or, More Links of the Daisy Chain • Charlotte M. Yonge

... at his present age of something over fifty, he is tall and not robust, with an extremely sympathetic face that has about it little of his father's rugged cast and sternness. Perhaps it is this evident sympathy that commands the affection of so many, for I have been told more than once that he is the best beloved man in the Army, and one who never ...
— Regeneration • H. Rider Haggard

... and to warn against the folly of, struggle against what must be; yet they were kind eyes, and humourous, with many of the small lines of laughter at their corners. Reading the eyes and mouth together one perceived gentleness and sternness to be well matched, working to any given end in amiable and effective compromise. "Uncle Peter" he had long been called by the public that knew him, and his own grandchildren had come to call him by the same term, finding him too young ...
— The Spenders - A Tale of the Third Generation • Harry Leon Wilson

... dolls and toys, when they began, about twelve, to use their minds (an epoch at which they ceased to laugh at Schmucke) they divined the secret of the cares that lined their father's forehead, and they recognized beneath that mask of sternness the relics of a kind heart and a fine character. They vaguely perceived how he had yielded to the forces of religion in his household, disappointed as he was in his hopes of a husband, and wounded in the tenderest ...
— A Daughter of Eve • Honore de Balzac


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