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Firmness   /fˈərmnəs/   Listen
Firmness

noun
1.
The muscle tone of healthy tissue.  Synonym: soundness.
2.
The trait of being resolute.  Synonyms: firmness of purpose, resoluteness, resolution, resolve.  "It was his unshakeable resolution to finish the work"
3.
The property of being unyielding to the touch.
4.
The quality of being steady or securely and immovably fixed in place.  Synonym: steadiness.



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"Firmness" Quotes from Famous Books



... said, drawing herself up; and for one brief second—could he but have seen her face—there was a touch of old Mackenzie's pride and firmness about the ordinarily gentle lips. It was but for a second. She cast down her eyes and said meekly, "I hope you won't do that, Frank. The dog is not to blame. ...
— Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Vol. XII, No. 29. August, 1873. • Various

... be quite bad near the African coast, can be spoken through. I am very glad I am here, for my machines are my own children and I look on their little failings with a parent's eye and lead them into the path of duty with gentleness and firmness. I am naturally in good spirits, but keep very quiet, for misfortunes may arise at any instant; moreover to-morrow my paying-out apparatus will be wanted should all go well, and that will be another nervous operation. Fifteen miles are safely in; but no one knows better than ...
— Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin • Robert Louis Stevenson

... who had most strenuously opposed the claim for divorce was Blessed John Fisher of Rochester, and with equally unflinching firmness he opposed the doctrine of the royal supremacy. He asserted that "The acceptance of such a principle would cause the clergy of England to be hissed out of the society of God's Holy Catholic Church." ...
— England of My Heart--Spring • Edward Hutton

... in all this. He has the finest part to perform, and he will perform it to his glory. He advances rapidly in the paths of former great men of the Republic. On the other side, the firmness of Amsterdam is seconded very seasonably by ...
— The Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, Vol. IX • Various

... works. The philosopher's stone, or tincture, or powder, as it is variously called, is no necromantic talisman, but consists simply of those particles which gold contains within itself for its reproduction; for gold, like other things, has its seed within itself, though bound up with inconceivable firmness, from the vigour of innate fixed salts and sulphurs. In seeking to discover the elixir of life, then," continued he, "we seek only to apply some of nature's own specifics against the disease and decay to which our ...
— Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists • Washington Irving


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