| 31. | It is typical of his judicial intemperance that he assumes as true some of the very facts in contention.
|
| 32. | So we reproach intemperance more, because it is easier to habituate oneself so as to avoid this problem.
|
| 33. | Among Greeks, the Macedonians viewed intemperance as a sign of masculinity and were well known for their drunkenness.
|
| 34. | :' After lunch, the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee spoke with great intemperance about the Arabs.
|
| 35. | He was competent enough, but he was addicted to intemperance to a degree that practically blighted his usefulness.
|
| 36. | Given these attitudes, workers become prone to a number of vices, including selfishness, cowardice, and intemperance.
|
| 37. | At the close of the meal this was replenished, but all intemperance was strictly forbidden by a special law.
|
| 38. | At one such meeting, he accused British rule of introducing the hitherto alien vice of intemperance to Hindu society.
|
| 39. | The second-most common cause of insanity, as recorded in the first annual report, was intemperance and dissipation.
|
| 40. | She supported the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and the Irish Association for the Prevention of Intemperance.
|