tamed

IPA: tˈeɪmd

adjective

  • domesticated; made tame
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Examples of "tamed" in Sentences

  • Only safer, "tamed" poetry is marketed by the big machines today.
  • In the end it was English diplomacy that truly tamed the maharajas.
  • Fiscal reforms put in force early in Erdogan's term tamed runaway inflation.
  • The picture on the left shows a family trying to feed the first ever hippopotamus to be tamed from the wild.
  • Among other things, Spock metapohrically refers to Kirk as a "race horse" that must be "tamed" (or was it "broken"?).
  • They lead a tamed elephant to battle, the king mounts a tamed elephant; the tamed is the best among men, he who silently endures abuse.
  • It implies, I think, a fundamental break with the domination impulse by which we have "tamed" nature over the millennia of recorded history and built our unstable civilizations, propped up by war and conquest.
  • In the context of Jewish law, that penis gets "tamed" - or perhaps "domesticated" is a better term-through guidelines and requirements that direct a husband's sexuality towards his wife-because in a religious context, of course, marital sex is the only legitimate sex-requiring him to be attentive to her needs and desires, while at the same time ensuring that there is enough sex for him to be satisfied.

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synonyms for tamed
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