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Deference   /dˈɛfərəns/  /dˈɛfrəns/   Listen
Deference

noun
1.
A courteous expression (by word or deed) of esteem or regard.  Synonym: respect.  "Be sure to give my respects to the dean"
2.
Courteous regard for people's feelings.  Synonyms: respect, respectfulness.  "Out of respect for his privacy"
3.
A disposition or tendency to yield to the will of others.  Synonyms: complaisance, compliance, compliancy, obligingness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Deference" Quotes from Famous Books



... single discreditable act is the only thing that keeps his name and memory alive in history. All that he achieved at the moment was to hurry the inevitable disclosure of the contents of a treaty which no one desired to conceal, except in deference to official form. Mason's note and copy of the treaty, made up into a pamphlet, were issued from Bache's press on July 2, and hundreds of copies were soon being carried by eager riders north and south ...
— George Washington, Vol. II • Henry Cabot Lodge

... Beatrice for her resistance to her father's wishes, but rather as describing the strength beyond her nature which she put into that resistance. For I hold that the dominion of parents on the one side, and the obedience of children and the deference of children to that dominion on the other side, may be made too much of and thought too much of, and in no case more so than when a controversy arises concerning matters of the heart. All this wisdom by the way. If Madonna ...
— The God of Love • Justin Huntly McCarthy

... The house is old; a Latin inscription shows it to have been given to the great Guild of Cross-bowmen by Queen Isabelle in the early years of the 17th century. The garden is older; long before the Guild of the Cross-bowmen of the Great Oath, in deference to the wish of Queen Isabelle, permitted the street to be made through it, the garden had been their exercising place. There Isabelle herself, a member of their order, had shot down the bird. But the garden had a yet more ancient past; when apple-trees, pear-trees and alleys of ...
— Emily Bront • A. Mary F. (Agnes Mary Frances) Robinson

... was one of those well-bred, commonplace gentlemen with which England is overrun. He had great deference for Scott, and endeavored to acquit himself learnedly in his company, aiming continually at abstract disquisitions, for which Scott had little relish. The conversation of the latter, as usual, was studded ...
— Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey • Washington Irving

... some 90,000 are Orthodox Tosks, and some 400,000 are Orthodox Slavs, Greeks and Vlachs. The Roman Catholic Ghegs appear to have abandoned the Eastern for the Western Church in the middle of the 13th century. Their bishops and priests, who Wear the moustache in deference to popular prejudice, are typical specimens of the church militant. Some of the Gheg tribes, such as the Puka, Malsia Jakovs and Malsia Krues, are partly Roman Catholic, partly Moslem; among fellowtribesmen the difference of religion counts for little. The Mirdites ...
— Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia


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