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Kind   /kaɪnd/   Listen
Kind

noun
1.
A category of things distinguished by some common characteristic or quality.  Synonyms: form, sort, variety.  "What kinds of desserts are there?"
adjective
(compar. kinder; superl. kindest)
1.
Having or showing a tender and considerate and helpful nature; used especially of persons and their behavior.  "A kind master" , "Kind words showing understanding and sympathy" , "Thanked her for her kind letter"
2.
Agreeable, conducive to comfort.  Synonym: genial.  "The genial sunshine" , "Hot summer pavements are anything but kind to the feet"
3.
Tolerant and forgiving under provocation.  Synonym: tolerant.



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"Kind" Quotes from Famous Books



... domestic servant, who has lived on kindly terms with the gentry and shared their standards. And for years after their marriage Hurd had allowed her to govern him. He had been so patient, so hard-working, such a kind husband and father, so full of a dumb wish to show her he was grateful to her for marrying such a fellow as he. The quarrel with Westall seemed to have sunk out of his mind. He never spoke to or of him. Low wages, the burden of quick-coming children, the bad sanitary conditions of their ...
— Marcella • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... hand—resolving also to use it with a stout heart. Then he advanced toward the snake, which was comparatively quiescent—that portion of its long body which hung between the tree and the first coil that it made round the beauteous form of Nisida alone moving; and this motion was a waving kind of oscillation, like that of a bell-rope which a person holds by the end ...
— Wagner, the Wehr-Wolf • George W. M. Reynolds

... "You are very kind, Christian," said Uncle Bernard with tears in his eyes. "Give me a potato, and then I will go to bed. I am more tired than anything else. I am not hungry. One hot potato will be quite ...
— The Man-Wolf and Other Tales • Emile Erckmann and Alexandre Chatrian

... in Cornwall, we find it a common opinion of the vulgar, that about Midsummer-Eve (though in the time they do not all agree) it is usual for snakes to meet in companies; and that, by joining heads together, and hissing, a kind of bubble is formed, which the rest, by continual hissing, blow on till it passes quite through the body, and then it immediately hardens, and resembles a glass-ring, which whoever finds (as some old women and children are persuaded) ...
— Balder The Beautiful, Vol. I. • Sir James George Frazer

... sake, Men marry: women are in marriage given The churl or ruffian, that in wealth has thriven, May match his offspring with the proudest race: Thus everything is mix'd, noble and base! If then in outward manner, form, and mind, You find us a degraded, motley kind, Wonder no more, my friend! the cause is plain, And to ...
— The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex • Charles Darwin


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