Loss of courage

  • 1Courage Tshabalala — (born 1971 05 27 in Eshowe, South Africa) was a heavily hyped [1] professional boxer in the Heavyweight division in the 1990s. In his native language his name means Quiet warrior . Contents 1 Amateur career 2 Professional career …

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  • 2Courage: Eight Portraits —   …

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  • 3courage — noun the courage of firefighters is just awesome Syn: bravery, courageousness, pluck, pluckiness, valour, fearlessness, intrepidity, nerve, daring, audacity, boldness, grit, true grit, hardihood, heroism, gallantry; informal guts, spunk, moxie …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 4Loss of Life in the Stalin Era — Alexander Yakovlev in a recent book, A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2002), put the number of deaths due to the Soviet system at 60 million. Yakovlev, who along with Mikhail Gorbachev was an… …

    Historical dictionary of Russian and Soviet Intelligence

  • 5Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure — For the series of road trips travelled by Hamish and Andy see:Caravan Of Courage (series) Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure You ll live the adventure... You ll love its heroes. Directed by …

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  • 6Pregnancy after a loss — Infobox Book name = Pregnancy After A Loss title orig = translator = image caption = author = Carol Cirulli Lanham illustrator = cover artist = country = United States of America language = English series = subject = Stillbirth genre = Non… …

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  • 7despair — despairer, n. /di spair /, n. 1. loss of hope; hopelessness. 2. someone or something that causes hopelessness: He is the despair of his mother. v.i. 3. to lose, give up, or be without hope (often fol. by of): to despair of humanity. v.t. 4. Obs.… …

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  • 8dismay — I. transitive verb (dismayed; dismaying) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French desmaier, from des dis + maier, from Vulgar Latin * magare, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German magan to be able more at may Date: 13th century 1. to… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 9unnerve — transitive verb Date: 1601 1. to deprive of courage, strength, or steadiness 2. to cause to become nervous ; upset • unnervingly adverb Synonyms: unnerve, enervate, unman, emasculate mean to deprive of strength or vigor and the capacity for… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 10discourage — vb 1 Discourage, dishearten, dispirit, deject mean to weaken in qualities that maintain interest, zeal, activity, or power to continue or to resist. Discourage implies not only the loss of courage and confidence but the entrance of fear and the… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms