Disciplinarian in a sentence as a noun

For the disciplinarian in all of us, at last, a ready and willing subject!

He was very stern, the disciplinarian, he divorced my mom when I was 11..

The point I was replying to said:the fact that Finland's schools are more disciplinarian than schools in the rest of Western EuropeThis is not a fact.

They'll eventually understand, and on some level, respect you more for being a disciplinarian.

My parents were never very disciplinarian, but one thing I got zero leeway with was being disrespectful to other people.

And in fact, schools are almost prohibited from playing the surrogate disciplinarian now, out of "equity" concerns.

In retrospect do you think your dad's approach was an effective teaching method?I'm slowly trying to figure out what kind of disciplinarian I'm going to be with my boys.

Clojure is highly disciplinarian and opinionated and I find that refreshing.

Those kids weren't bad kids, but they seemed to have absolutely no self-control, no internal disciplinarian to put a brake on their impulses, to keep their attention focused.

My dad was my dad until I left home for university - he loved us and provided for us but also was the authority and disciplinarian when necessary.

I think D&I needs to be looked at through this pragmatic lens rather than the moralistic, sensationalistic and bureaucratic/disciplinarian lens that it is so often seen through.

Yes, Varoufakis mentioned: "Based on months of negotiation, my conviction is that the German finance minister wants Greece to be pushed out of the single currency to put the fear of God into the French and have them accept his model of a disciplinarian eurozone.

Workers engage in frugality, stockholders enjoy the billions.> because people challenged authorityAmazon is quite data-driven when it comes to engineering but very vertical and disciplinarian.

The disciplinarian and I were discussing it and I was adamant that we could forgive his using any other verbiage, up to and including sob or the f-word in that context, but that I could never in a million years believe that anyone would use that particular slur after stubbing a toe or getting a paper cut.

Disciplinarian definitions

noun

someone who demands exact conformity to rules and forms

See also: martinet moralist