Stamina in a sentence as a noun

A healthy 40 year old has more stamina and well-being than an obese 30 year old.

The only reason kids can manage it is that they have way more stamina than I do now.

I've meant to compile this list, so you just inspired me. I wish the Durants had had the stamina for one more volume.

That's just the author building up sufficient stamina to stand.

I would bet startup founders need that stamina, although I'm sure there are many more components to success.

It's more a stamina test to see how well I can be tortured and hazed and it makes me reluctant to take on more interviews.

As your stamina improves, you begin to be able to handle standing an entire day, but you're still sore after a few days or a week.

As an individual, you're right, it's tough to do much on your own, since no individual has the same stamina as the forces that we're fighting.

My stamina beat out my companions' significantly, even people who are otherwise much more active than I am.

"In Wikipedia, debates can be won by stamina.

AI cars don't get bored, distracted, suffer fatigue, or need the physical stamina to drive an optimal line rain or shine hundreds of times in a row.

However, my mental stamina is also important if I'm going to be doing anything useful, so I try to strike a balance between social obligation and isolation.

I expect golf rewards basic aptitudes like co-ordination, strength and stamina, etc., and that pros' endowments on these are four or five standard deviations from the population norm.

Is it completely implausible to suggest that there are cognitive equivalents that would pertain to programming?Why couldn't mental stamina be as genetically ingrained as physical stamina?

Rollercoaster Tycoon has the same mechanicnot only was each person a discrete, persistent individual, they had their own unique mood, stamina, hunger, tolerance for waiting, and individual tastes in amusements, food, etc.

Dungeons also have strange difficulty levels, where the boss is significantly more challenging than the levels leading to it, so after you've invested the time to get there, you have the choice of "paying" $1 each time you are about to lose, or leaving the dungeon and potentially having to "pay" $1 to play more -- especially since the harder dungeons eat up a larger portion of your stamina.

Stamina definitions

noun

enduring strength and energy

See also: toughness