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parsimoniousness
noun
The state or condition of being parsimonious.
Exact(5)
As creditor-in-chief, one would expect him to be toughest in imposing conditions on Greece before granting a second bail-out.But the Schäuble problem goes beyond this necessary parsimoniousness.
By the time of his death, in 1908, he was no longer performing (though several Blind Tom impostors were plying the vaudeville circuit), and, owing to either indifference or parsimoniousness, he was buried at the Evergreens in an unmarked grave.
McCarthy has his own idea of thrift, as he shows with his eccentric rationing of punctuation (dont, musnt, wasnt), but he reverses the linguistic parsimoniousness of the master.
It strikes me that the parsimoniousness that haunted Britain's postwar years clings to the work, with its chamber orchestra of just 13 players and cast of eight singers.
Against the grain of much recent historiography — and in the teeth of a powerful literary tendency going back to the end of the 19th century — she defended John Calvin, Jonathan Edwards and their descendants against the usual charges of intolerance, prudery and parsimoniousness.
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