How to Use temperance in a Sentence

temperance

noun
  • There have been no signs of temperance by the president on the stump in recent days.
    Susan Page, USA TODAY, 22 Oct. 2020
  • Grant me temperance, but not yet Drinks firms can take some comfort from China, where covid-19 fears are on the wane.
    The Economist, 23 May 2020
  • After all, the Methodists were leaders in the temperance movement.
    Erik Lacitis, The Seattle Times, 3 July 2018
  • The temperance movement is upturned by drinking songs and free beer passed out by the dandy minions.
    Mark Swed, latimes.com, 16 Mar. 2018
  • The once heavy-drinking Tsar Nicholas II had increasingly been won to the temperance cause.
    Mark Lawrence Schrad, Time, 20 July 2021
  • What followed has been described as an age of neo-temperance.
    Kate Julian, The Atlantic, 1 June 2021
  • The matter of the pastors’ Sunday best touches on questions of temperance and lust.
    Troy Patterson, The New Yorker, 14 June 2019
  • Many philosophers through the ages have spoken of virtues such as temperance, courage, justice and prudence.
    WSJ, 21 June 2019
  • The original cream soda had real dairy in it and was marketed as a temperance drink on the East Coast in the late 19th century.
    Vulture, 1 Dec. 2022
  • Yet the extent to which that bolstered the overall system is viewed with temperance, at least outwardly.
    Matt Kawahara, San Francisco Chronicle, 8 Sep. 2022
  • Prohibition The backbone of the temperance movement during the late 1800s was women’s fury at the loutishness of men.
    Allison Robicelli, Washington Post, 16 Jan. 2024
  • Or look at Highland Park, which was also its own city and drew upon the [Christian] temperance movement.
    Scott Holleran, Glendale News-Press, 9 May 2017
  • Moreover, the temperance movement in the United States began decades after his death.
    Hannah C. Griggs, The Atlantic, 27 May 2018
  • In the United States, a wide range of groups, from Whig Party offshoots to late-19th-century temperance leagues, claimed the slogan to various ends.
    Beverly Gage, New York Times, 30 Aug. 2016
  • And @thesuzeum showed her own temperance in channeling Edward Burne-Jones.
    Carly Mallenbaum, USA TODAY, 4 Apr. 2020
  • The bar becomes an altar on Sundays, but there’s no preacher, so the schoolmarm provides temperance lectures from it, which the men are obliged to attend.
    Robert Coover, The New Yorker, 28 Nov. 2016
  • The social pressure of wellness culture is its own kind of temperance movement.
    Esther Mobley, San Francisco Chronicle, 17 Mar. 2021
  • Back then, mince pie was the pie of choice — so beloved that when the temperance movement went after alcohol, a federal judge ruled brandy could still go into mince pie.
    Liz Biro, Indianapolis Star, 18 Nov. 2019
  • Their father had been a minister and was head of the local temperance society.
    Howard Fishman, Rolling Stone, 28 Apr. 2023
  • The house also played a role in the county’s slave economy, the Civil War, the temperance and women’s suffrage movements, and the introduction of the telephone.
    Frank Batavick, baltimoresun.com/maryland/carroll, 11 June 2021
  • Her father was a minister and the head of the local temperance society; her mother was a pianist.
    Jeremy Lybarger, The New Republic, 24 Apr. 2023
  • Her default mode is an inviting temperance, in sorrow as well as in the previous album’s joy.
    Chris Willman, Variety, 10 Sep. 2021
  • Women fought for temperance laws restricting alcohol as well as the right to vote and the abolition of slavery.
    Alicia Eler, Star Tribune, 19 Mar. 2021
  • Those health risks made apple orchards a target of the temperance movement, starting in the 19th century.
    New York Times, 2 Feb. 2021
  • The fifth examines the ruins of an old cider mill distillery and what the temperance movement in Hartford County, including Avon, looked like.
    Courant Community, 18 Sep. 2017
  • Brown was a skilled public speaker who spoke about civil rights, temperance and women's suffrage.
    Jessie Balmert, Cincinnati.com, 14 June 2019
  • The walls of their tasting room, known as the Speakeasy Lab, re-create the legend of the 19th-century short story written by a temperance advocate named George Cheever.
    James Sullivan, BostonGlobe.com, 13 Apr. 2023
  • The invincibility of youth yields to the temperance and perspective of age.
    Anna Altman, The New Republic, 17 Feb. 2021
  • For one thing, the thread connecting temperance and suffrage weaves mainly through upper-crust white women.
    Curt Brown, Star Tribune, 1 Aug. 2020
  • Besides the Trib, his great passions, if they may be called that, were civil-service reform, temperance, and habits of personal economy.
    Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker, 2 Oct. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'temperance.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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