Dictionary Definition
abstinence
Noun
1 the trait of abstaining (especially from
alcohol) [syn: abstention]
2 act or practice of refraining from indulging an
appetite
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /'æbstιnəns/
Noun
- The act or practice of abstaining, refraining from indulging a desire.
- The abstinence from a present pleasure that offers itself is a pain, nay, oftentimes, a very great one. - John Locke
- Specifically, the practice of abstaining from intoxicating/alcoholic beverages (also called total abstinence, teetotalism).
- Specifically, the practice of abstaining from sexual intercourse, either permanently or until marriage.
- The practice of self-denial by
depriving one's self
(partly or totally) of certain kinds of food or drink, especially
meat.
- Penance, fasts, and abstinence, / To punish bodies for the soul's offense. - John Dryden
Translations
the act or practice of abstaining
- Dutch: onthouding
- Finnish: pidättyminen
- German: Enthaltsamkeit , Abstinenz
- Norwegian: avhold, avholdenhet
- Portuguese: abstinência
- Serbioan: uzdržljivost, samoodricanje, uzdržavanje, umerenost, trezvenost, trezvenjaštvo
specifically, abstinence from alcohol
- Dutch: alcoholonthouding , geheelonthouding (more frequent)
- German: Abstinenz
- Norwegian: avhold, avholdenhet
- Portuguese: abstinência
specifically, abstinence from sexual intercourse
- Dutch: onthouding
- German: Keuschheit
- Norwegian: avhold, avholdenhet
- Portuguese: abstinência sexual
the practice of self-denial
- Dutch: onthouding
- German: Enthaltsamkeit
- Norwegian: avhold, avholdenhet
Translations to be checked
- ttbc French: abstinence
- ttbc Interlingua: abstinentia
- ttbc Interlingua: abstinentia de alcohol
- ttbc Spanish: abstinencia
- ttbc Spanish: abstinencia del alcohol
See also
References
- Webster 1913
Extensive Definition
Abstinence is a voluntary restraint from
indulging a desire or appetite for certain bodily activities that
are widely experienced as giving pleasure. Most frequently, the
term refers to abstention from sexual
intercourse, alcohol
or food. The practice can
arise from religious prohibitions or practical
considerations.
Abstinence has diverse forms. Commonly it refers
to a temporary or partial abstinence from food, as in fasting. Because the regimen is
intended to be a conscious act, freely chosen to enhance life,
abstinence is sometimes distinguished from the psychological
mechanism of repression.
The latter is an unconscious state, having unhealthy consequences.
Freud termed
the channeling of sexual energies into other more culturally or
socially acceptable activities "sublimation".
Abstinence in religion
Abstinence may arise from an ascetic element, present in most religions, or from a subjective need for spiritual discipline. In its religious context, abstinence is meant to elevate the believer beyond the normal life of desire, to a chosen ideal, by following a path of renunciation.For Jews, the principal
fast day is Yom Kippur,
the Day of Atonement. For Muslims, the period
of fasting lasts during the whole month of Ramadan, from dawn
to dusk. Both Jews and Muslims abstain from pork in their regular diet. In
Islam, pre-marital
sex is prohibited. Many Christians (as
well as other religions) aim to be completely abstinent from
pre-marital sex. Also, Catholics abstain
from food and drink prior to taking Mass, and
abstain from meat on Ash
Wednesday and on Fridays during Lent. Many Traditionalist
Catholics abstain all Fridays in the year. Catholics
distinguish between
fasting and abstinence; the former referring to the discipline
of taking one full meal a day, and the latter signifying the
discipline of eating no meat (fish is allowed). Some Protestants have
preferred to abstain from drinking alcohol and the use of tobacco.
Mormons
abstain from certain foods and drinks by combining spiritual
discipline with health concerns. Mormons also fast one day a month,
for both spiritual and charitable reasons (the money saved by
skipping meals is donated to the needy). The
Seventh-day Adventist Church encourages the consumption of only
clean meats as specified in Leviticus and
strongly discourages the consumption of alcohol, smoking and the
use of narcotics.
In India, Buddhists,
Jains, and
Hindus abstain from eating meat on the grounds both of health and
of reverence for all sentient forms of life. Total abstinence from
feeding on the flesh of cows is a hallmark of Hinduism.
In medicine
In medicine, abstinence is the discontinuation of a drug, often an addictive one. This might, in addition to craving after the drug, be expressed as withdrawal syndromes.References
See also
Types of abstinence
Organizations
Other related topics
abstinence in Czech: Abstinence
abstinence in Danish: Abstinens
abstinence in German: Abstinenz
abstinence in Estonian: Abstinents
abstinence in Spanish: Abstinencia
abstinence in Esperanto: Abstinado
abstinence in French: Abstinence
abstinence in Indonesian: Pantang
abstinence in Japanese: 小斎
abstinence in Norwegian Nynorsk: Abstinens
abstinence in Narom: Astinenche
abstinence in Polish: Abstynencja
abstinence in Portuguese: Abstinência
abstinence in Romanian: Abstinenţă
abstinence in Slovak: Abstinencia
abstinence in Serbian: Апстиненција
abstinence in Swedish: Abstinens
abstinence in Ukrainian: Абстиненція
abstinence in Walloon: Abtinince
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Albigensianism, Catharism, Encratism, Franciscanism, Friday, Lenten fare, Platonic
love, Pythagoreanism, Pythagorism, Rechabitism, Sabbatarianism, Shakerism, Spartan fare,
Stoicism, Trappism, Waldensianism, Yoga, abnegation, abstainment, abstemiousness, abstention, abstinence from
food, anchoritic monasticism, anchoritism, asceticism, austerity, avoidance, banyan day,
calm, calmness, celibacy, chastity, conservatism, constraint, continence, continency, control, cool, desuetude, dispassion, disuse, eremitism, eschewal, evenness, fast, fasting, fish day, flagellation, fruitarianism, gentleness, golden mean,
gymnosophy, happy
medium, impartiality, intactness, judiciousness,
juste-milieu, lenity,
maceration, maidenhead, maidenhood, meden agan,
mendicantism,
middle way, mildness,
moderateness,
moderation, moderationism, monachism, monasticism, mortification, nephalism, neutrality, nonemployment, nonprevalence, nonuse, nonviolence, nothing in
excess, obsolescence, obsoleteness, obsoletion, obsoletism, pacifism, pensioning off, plain
living, prudence,
punishment of Tantalus, puritanism, refraining, refrainment, renunciation, repose, restraint, restriction of
intake, retirement,
rigor, self-abnegation,
self-control, self-denial, self-mortification, self-restraint,
serenity, sexual
abstinence, simple diet, sobriety, spare diet, stability, starvation, steadiness, superannuation, teetotalism, temperance, temperateness, the pledge,
total abstinence, tranquillity, unexcessiveness,
unextravagance,
unextremeness,
unprevalence,
vegetarianism, via
media, virginity,
voluntary poverty