Meekness in a sentence as a noun

Grant scoffed at the founders meekness at not going full ahead and passed an opportunity to invest.

What impresses me is the expression of humility, meekness and modesty.

You're confusing "defensive" with qualities of meekness or lack of assertiveness.

"Will to power" without meekness, suffering, or poverty seems to fit a supervillain more than a superhero.

Then claim and blame a broken democracy or political meekness of American voters.

I chuckled, but - to be fair - Gruber's article hardly suggests that Ping is "smarter than you think" or that it will "prove the naysayers wrong".In fact, I find the meekness of the article interesting.

> As far as meekness, loudly proclaiming that you are valuing options at zero is great way of letting your co workers and others know of your level of interest in the success of company.

> Wasn't the passivity and meekness of the opposition the exact reason fascists were able to rise relatively easily in the intrawar period?No, it wasn't.

It shouldn't be the accepted standard to put them in a cage and forget they exist, we need to show them the flaws of their moral system: we need to preach to them until they concede the errors of their ways and show meekness.

I've definitely noticed a certain technical meekness lately, and honestly, I'm worried that it's connected to the broader cultural trend toward deference to authorities.

Not to Godwin it or anything, but...Wasn't the passivity and meekness of the opposition the exact reason fascists were able to rise relatively easily in the intrawar period?Personally, I think the concept that there aren't ideas worth throwing a punch over is equally as repugnant as saying you should punch anyone you disagree with.

Meekness definitions

noun

the feeling of patient, submissive humbleness

See also: submission

noun

a disposition to be patient and long suffering

See also: subduedness