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Webster 1913 Edition


Inclemency

In-clem′en-cy

,
Noun.
;
pl.
Inclemencies
(#)
.
[L.
inclementia
: cf. F.
inclémence
.]
1.
The state or quality of being inclement; lack of clemency; lack of mildness of temper; unmercifulness; severity.
The
inclemency
of the late pope.
Bp. Hall.
2.
Physical severity or harshness (commonly in respect to the elements or weather); roughness; storminess; rigor; severe cold, wind, rain, or snow.
The
inclemencies
of morning air.
Pope.
Syn. – Harshness; severity; cruelty; rigor; roughness; storminess; boisterousness.

Webster 1828 Edition


Inclemency

INCLEM'ENCY

,
Noun.
[L. inclementia. See Clemency.]
1.
Want of clemency; want of mildness of temper; unmercifulness; harshness; severity; applied to persons.
2.
Roughness, boisterousness; storminess; or simply raininess; severe cold, &c.; applied to the weather. We were detained by the inclemency of the weather.

Definition 2024


inclemency

inclemency

English

Noun

inclemency (usually uncountable, plural inclemencies)

  1. The quality of being inclement
  2. A lack of clemency
  3. Something that is inclement
    • 1849, Edwin Bryant, What I Saw in California:
      They are built of rough sticks, covered with bulrushes or grass, in such a manner as to completely protect the inhabitants from all the inclemencies of the weather.
    • 1874, Jules Verne, The Mysterious Island:
      There had been rain, squalls mingled with snow, hailstorms, gusts of wind, but these inclemencies did not last.
    • 1922, Charles Sylvester, Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 5:
      The cry of the suffering and dying rings in our ears, as they are dragged from their beds, to be exposed to the inclemencies of the ice-covered sea in an open boat.