self-abnegation
English
    
    Etymology
    
self- + abnegation
Noun
    
self-abnegation (countable and uncountable, plural self-abnegations)
- The denial or invalidation of one's own needs, interests, etc. for the sake of another's; the setting aside of self-interest.
- Synonyms: self-denial, self-sacrifice
 - 1656, Edward Reyner, Rules for the Government of the Tongue, London: Thomas Newberry, page 324:- [Self commendation] should bee accompanied with Self-abnegation, or a renouncing of all Self-conceit, Self-sufficiency, Self seeking, or Self worthiness; to prick the bladder of pride in us.
 
- 1925 July – 1926 May, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, “In which Challenger Meets a Strange Colleague”, in The Land of Mist (eBook no. 0601351h.html), Australia: Project Gutenberg Australia, published April 2019:- You understand, of course, that it is only by serving and self-abnegation that we advance in the higher world."
 
- 1934, D. H. Lawrence, “The Old Adam”, in Keith Sagar, editor, The Mortal Coil and Other Stories, Penguin, published 1971, pages 84–85:- She must no longer allow herself to hope for anything for herself. The rest of her life must be spent in self-abnegation: she must seek for no sympathy, must ask for no grace in love, no grace and harmony in living. Henceforward, as far as her own desires went, she was dead.
 
- 2006, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, chapter 8, in Wizard of the Crow, New York: Pantheon, page 231:- The problem was that the Ruler never let anyone know what was expected of him to retain his place of honor. Even humility and self-abnegation, however abject, were not enough to prevent one’s downfall.
 
- 2023 September 18, Zoe Williams, “The booing of the national anthem shows the vulnerability of King Charles’s reign”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:- He [King Charles] lacks, too, that aura of self-abnegation, of having surrendered himself to duty.
 
 
- (countable) An act of self-denial.
- 1879, Herbert Spencer, chapter 14, in The Data of Ethics, New York: Hurst, page 292:- […] self-abnegations often repeated imply on the part of the actor a tacit ascription of relative selfishness to others who profit by the self-abnegations.
 
- 1922, Coningsby Dawson, chapter 4, in The Vanishing Point, New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation, page 149:- There was something monstrous about his self-abnegations. Perhaps he denied himself the things for which he did not care. He wanted to seem nobler than any one else.
 
- 1989, John Updike, “Fast Art”, in Alan R. Pratt, editor, The Critical Response to Andy Warhol, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, published 1997, page 196:- In one of his first self-abnegations he [Andy Warhol] induced her [his mother] to sign his works, and write his captions, in her own clumsy but clear handwriting.
 
 
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