chasteness การใช้
- She will not be inviting in her attitudes and will protect her chasteness . "
- If anything, it's innocent in spirit and has an almost 1950s chasteness _ and it's thankfully short.
- Their chasteness was thought to be a safeguard of the city, and even in punishment the state of their bodies was preserved in order to maintain the peace.
- Two ways the movie version could have avoided this trap : It might have portrayed the angels as straight-laced, stern professionals _ and turned their chasteness into part of the joke.
- For chasteness there's the green goatskin gilt binding that Thomas James Cobden-Sanderson, founder of the Doves Press, designed for William Morris'copy of the first French translation of Marx's " Capital ."
- She is supported by Pooja, who makes the point that it would be wrong and even sinful for Jyoti to marry one man while being in love with another; chasteness of the mind is as important as chasteness of the body.
- She is supported by Pooja, who makes the point that it would be wrong and even sinful for Jyoti to marry one man while being in love with another; chasteness of the mind is as important as chasteness of the body.
- It also shows an unflattering side of women : cruel, tough, selfish ( " the lovely news that someone got sick over me " ) . . . " savage " It turns traditional morality on its head : the chasteness of her friends Yunglin and Yufang is " just one of those strange, unexplained things in life ."
- She wonders whether she is promiscuous and in a particularly sweet and wonderful speech laments to her friend Olive ( who is promiscuous ) that she doesn't know if the lessons in chasteness she learned at home are realistic, if the stirrings of passion she often feels are unique to her, if she's the only woman who is so confused.
- In 1828 she published a first collection, " Poems ", by private subscription running to 1, 700 copies . and more blandly in " The Atheneum " as a work of'chasteness . . . of thought and language, pleasing and appropriate similes, natural metaphores and very gentle pathos . . . [ with ] a vein of melancholy running through the whole . "'Poems " was reprinted in 1828 and a third edition published in 1829;