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Tame   /teɪm/   Listen
adjective
Tame  adj.  (compar. tamer; superl. tamest)  
1.
Reduced from a state of native wildness and shyness; accustomed to man; domesticated; domestic; as, a tame deer, a tame bird.
2.
Crushed; subdued; depressed; spiritless. "Tame slaves of the laborious plow."
3.
Deficient in spirit or animation; spiritless; dull; flat; insipid; as, a tame poem; tame scenery.
Synonyms: Gentle; mild; meek. See Gentle.



verb
Tame  v. t.  To broach or enter upon; to taste, as a liquor; to divide; to distribute; to deal out. (Obs. or Prov. Eng.) "In the time of famine he is the Joseph of the country, and keeps the poor from starving. Then he tameth his stacks of corn, which not his covetousness, but providence, hath reserved for time of need."



Tame  v. t.  (past & past part. tamed; pres. part. taming)  
1.
To reduce from a wild to a domestic state; to make gentle and familiar; to reclaim; to domesticate; as, to tame a wild beast. "They had not been tamed into submission, but baited into savegeness and stubbornness."
2.
To subdue; to conquer; to repress; as, to tame the pride or passions of youth.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Tame" Quotes from Famous Books



... is due perhaps to its origin, for it grows wild round the northern hemisphere, its chief haunts being the dim, cold, damp woods of the high latitudes. You may tame, modify, and vastly change anything possessing life; but original traits are scarcely ever wholly eradicated. Therefore the natural habitat and primal qualities of the currant indicate the true lines of development, ...
— The Home Acre • E. P. Roe

... so; but I would not exchange those ten or fifteen minutes with that trout for the tame two hours you have spent in catching that string of thirty. To see a big fish after days of small fry is an event; to have a jump from one is a glimpse of the sportsman's paradise; and to hook one, and actually have him under your control ...
— In the Catskills • John Burroughs

... become what we call tame—that is to say, his wings had been clipped; he was allowed out of his cage, because he could no longer fly away, and he sang when he was told, because he was whipped ...
— The Blue Moon • Laurence Housman

... property and of settlement, they set the example of a lively invention, and superior ingenuity, in the practice of arts, and the study of science. The Laplander, on the contrary, like the associate of his climate, is hardy, indefatigable, and patient of famine; dull rather than tame; serviceable in a particular tract; and incapable of change. Whole nations continue from age to age in the same condition, and, with immoveable phlegm, submit to the appellations of Dane, of Swede, or of Muscovite, ...
— An Essay on the History of Civil Society, Eighth Edition • Adam Ferguson, L.L.D.

... declining led Owen to further argument. At the last moment Pauline, impatient at the suspense, entered the Frenchman's "hangar" and added her blandishments to Owen's financial inducements. The gallant foreigner succumbed and a bargain was struck. He exhibited his tame bird of steel and wood and cloth with the utter pride of a mother showing off her ...
— The Perils of Pauline • Charles Goddard


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