Respite in a sentence as a noun

It's a bit tiring seeing it get bashed without respite over here.

A moment of respite from the turmoil is all the last two or three years represents.

HN would benefit from a programming font respite.

You would have to constantly be under attack with only brief respite to repair your ship.

Indeed, the early days of 'living online' offered a respite from peer pressure.

This find may prove a respite and diminish the urgency of the thorium program.

I'm reviewing a fairly large amount of Java code this week for a client; being hollered at on HN is a respite.

They are relentless; such respite would serve us well while continuing to construct an effective response.

Respite in a sentence as a verb

I like how Florian Mueller manages to spin this[1] as a two year respite for Google who will eventually lose on appeal!

I wonder how many other nerds sit at their desks and catch a minute's respite by daydreaming of building something great?

His commentary is a delightful respite from the ultra-polarized world of Reddit and Fox News.

No, the relentless compelling evidence that pours out in torrents day after day without respite is what makes it look like it is corrupt.

That he can rape someone and the law will look the other way, or that he can be raped and the authorities will offer him no protection, no respite.

Funny enough, one commenter on this article advocated Rails:"I don't want to start yet another religious war, but for a nice respite from the complexities of J2EE frameworks, check out Ruby on Rails.

The amorality of forcing the suffering to continue existing without possibility of respite using the former as the excuse is a social problem that no amount of technology will suffice to repair.

Do you accept that if such a "love" happened, it would be so clearly tainted by unequal power, the fear of reprisals, the hope for respite and status, that it would be a mockery even if both parties honestly felt it?Now ask how it can be different in prison?

Respite definitions

noun

a (temporary) relief from harm or discomfort

See also: reprieve

noun

a pause from doing something (as work); "we took a 10-minute break"; "he took time out to recuperate"

See also: recess break

noun

an interruption in the intensity or amount of something

See also: suspension reprieve hiatus abatement

noun

a pause for relaxation; "people actually accomplish more when they take time for short rests"

See also: rest relief

noun

the act of reprieving; postponing or remitting punishment

See also: reprieve

verb

postpone the punishment of a convicted criminal, such as an execution

See also: reprieve