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Defensive   /dɪfˈɛnsɪv/   Listen
Defensive

adjective
1.
Intended or appropriate for defending against or deterring aggression or attack.  "A defensive stance"  Antonym: offensive.
2.
Attempting to justify or defend in speech or writing.  Synonyms: justificative, justificatory.
noun
1.
An attitude of defensiveness (especially in the phrase 'on the defensive').  Synonym: defensive attitude.



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"Defensive" Quotes from Famous Books



... Criticism, either didactick or defensive, occupies almost all his prose, except those pages which he has devoted to his patrons; but none of his prefaces were ever thought tedious. They have not the formality of a settled style, in which the first half of the sentence ...
— Lives of the Poets, Vol. 1 • Samuel Johnson

... He had observed for some time that things were not quite as they should be in his friend's home. Stafford seemed to be more indifferent to his wife, he stayed out more at nights; she, on her side, appeared to be continually on the defensive, as if there was constant friction. But by no outward sign could she have guessed that he gauged ...
— Bought and Paid For - From the Play of George Broadhurst • Arthur Hornblow

... exaggerated his opponents' strength. In fact, he crept forward so cautiously that the Confederates, who had almost resigned themselves to losing the city, hastened to bring up reenforcements and erect defensive works of a really formidable character. The best that was hoped for, however, was to delay the Union army. To defeat it, or even to check its advance, seemed impossible, and doubtless it would have proved so had it not been for the brilliant ...
— On the Trail of Grant and Lee • Frederick Trevor Hill

... since, if it fits well, its weight will be distributed over the whole body; whereas, if too loose, the shoulders will have all the weight to bear, while, if too tight, the corselet is no longer a defensive arm, but a "strait jacket." (1) Again, the neck, as being a vital part, (2) ought to have, as we maintain, a covering, appended to the corselet and close-fitting. This will serve as an ornament, and if made as it ought to be, will conceal the rider's face—if so he chooses—up ...
— On Horsemanship • Xenophon

... 'medium' to the Apostolic assertion, that corruption in this passage is a descriptive synonyme of the material sensuous organism common to saint and sinner,—standing in precisely the same relation to the man that the testaceous offensive and defensive armour does to the crab and tortoise. These slightly combined and easily decomponible stuffs are as incapable of subsisting under the altered conditions of the earth as an hydatid in the blaze of a tropical sun. They would be no longer 'media' of communion ...
— Coleridge's Literary Remains, Volume 4. • Samuel Taylor Coleridge


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