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HOME | Definition of violence (VIOLENCE, Violence)


    Violence \Vi"o*lence\, n. [F., fr. L. violentia. See Violent.]
    1. The quality or state of being violent; highly excited
    action, whether physical or moral; vehemence; impetuosity;
    force.
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    That seal
    You ask with such a violence, the king,
    Mine and your master, with his own hand gave me.
    --Shak.
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    All the elements
    At least had gone to wrack, disturbed and torn
    With the violence of this conflict. --Milton.
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    2. Injury done to that which is entitled to respect,
    reverence, or observance; profanation; infringement;
    unjust force; outrage; assault.
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    Do violence to do man. --Luke iii.
    14.
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    We can not, without offering violence to all
    records, divine and human, deny an universal deluge.
    --T. Burnet.
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    Looking down, he saw
    The whole earth filled with violence. --Milton.
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    3. Ravishment; rape; constupration.
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    To do violence on, to attack; to murder. "She . . . did
    violence on herself." --Shak.

    To do violence to, to outrage; to injure; as, he does
    violence to his own opinions.
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    Syn: Vehemence; outrage; fierceness; eagerness; violation;
    infraction; infringement; transgression; oppression.
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    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Violence \Vi"o*lence\, v. t.
    To assault; to injure; also, to bring by violence; to compel.
    [Obs.] --B. Jonson.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    violence
    n 1: an act of aggression (as one against a person who resists);
    "he may accomplish by craft in the long run what he
    cannot do by force and violence in the short one" [syn:
    force]
    2: the property of being wild or turbulent; "the storm's
    violence" [syn: ferocity, fierceness, furiousness, fury,
    vehemence, wildness]
    3: a turbulent state resulting in injuries and destruction etc.

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    148 Moby Thesaurus words for "violence":
    Alecto, Megaera, Nemesis, Tisiphone, abuse, acerbity, acidity,
    acridity, acrimony, agitability, animality, argumentum baculinum,
    assault, astringency, atrociousness, atrocity, attack, barbarity,
    barbarousness, beastliness, bestiality, bite, bitterness,
    bloodiness, bloodlust, bloodthirst, bloodthirstiness,
    bloody-mindedness, brutality, brutalness, brute force, brutishness,
    burning rage, cannibalism, causticity, clash, coercion,
    combustibility, compulsion, constraint, cruelness, cruelty, damage,
    destructiveness, distort, do violence to, duress, edge, edginess,
    emotional instability, emotionalism, energy, eruptiveness,
    excitability, excitableness, explosiveness, ferociousness,
    ferocity, fiendishness, fierceness, foul, frenzy, furious rage,
    furor, fury, grip, harm, harshness, high pressure, ill-treatment,
    ill-usage, ill-use, inflammability, inhumaneness, inhumanity,
    injure, injury, intensity, intimidation, irascibility,
    irritability, keenness, latent violence, maltreatment, might,
    mightiness, mistreatment, molestation, mordacity, mordancy,
    murderousness, nervousness, outrage, passion, perturbability,
    physical force, poignancy, point, power, pressure, prickliness,
    rage, rigor, roughness, ruthlessness, sadism, sadistic cruelty,
    sanguineousness, savagery, sensitivity, severity, sharpness,
    skittishness, startlishness, sting, strength, stridency,
    stringency, strong-arm tactics, tartness, tearing passion, teeth,
    tempestuousness, the Erinyes, the Eumenides, the Furies,
    the big stick, the bludgeon, the club, the jackboot,
    the mailed fist, the strong arm, the sword, touchiness,
    towering rage, trenchancy, truculence, twist, uproar, vandalism,
    vehemence, viciousness, vigor, violation, virulence,
    wanton cruelty, warp, wildness

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    VIOLENCE. The abuse of force. Theorie des Lois Criminelles, 32. That force
    which is employed against common right, against the laws, and against public
    liberty. Merl. h. t, 2. In cases of robbery, in order to convict the
    accused, it is requisite to prove that the act was done with violence; but
    this violence is not confined to an actual assault of the person, by
    beating, knocking down, or forcibly wresting from him on the contrary,
    whatever goes to intimidate or overawe, by the apprehension of personal
    violence, or by fear of life, with a view to compel the delivery of property
    equally falls within its limits. Alison, Pr. Cr. Law of Scotl. 228; 4 Binn.
    R. 379; 2 Russ. on Cr. 61; 1 Hale P. C. 553. When an article is merely
    snatched, as by a sudden pull, even though a momentary force be exerted, it
    is not such violence as to constitute a robbery. 2 East, P. C. 702; 2 Russ.
    Cr. 68; Dig. 4, 2, 2 and 3.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)




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