For the inordinateness of anger may be considered in relation to two things.
2
Therefore inordinateness in man was through the desire of knowledge, which pertains to curiosity.
3
Nevertheless such inducement may be affected by a threefold inordinateness.
4
But, in venial sin, there is an inordinateness of the act and of the affections.
5
Hence the first movement of gluttony denotes inordinateness in the sensitive appetite, and this is not without sin.
1
His acts of piety and charity became grotesque in their excessiveness.
2
There are certain enormities in this man-of-war world that often secure impunity by their very excessiveness.
3
Something about the excessiveness of the bedroom bespoke a soul who loved beauty but who was also out of control.
4
She reveled almost sensuously in the excessiveness of the contrast, quite unconcerned that her white gown was several years out of date.
5
She is eminently devoid of excessiveness either in pose or in treatment, with the result that your eye is refreshingly cooled with the delicate process.