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1 definition found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
e·con·o·my
n.
;
pl
.
Economies
1.
The
management
of
domestic
affairs
;
the
regulation
and
government
of
household
matters
;
especially
as
they
concern
expense
or
disbursement
;
as
,
a
careful
economy
.
Himself
busy
in
charge
of
the
household
economies
.
--
Froude
.
2.
Orderly
arrangement
and
management
of
the
internal
affairs
of
a
state
or
of
any
establishment
kept
up
by
production
and
consumption
;
esp
.,
such
management
as
directly
concerns
wealth
;
as
,
political
economy
.
3.
The
system
of
rules
and
regulations
by
which
anything
is
managed
;
orderly
system
of
regulating
the
distribution
and
uses
of
parts
,
conceived
as
the
result
of
wise
and
economical
adaptation
in
the
author
,
whether
human
or
divine
;
as
,
the
animal
or
vegetable
economy
;
the
economy
of
a
poem
;
the
Jewish
economy
.
The
position
which
they
[
the
verb
and
adjective
]
hold
in
the
general
economy
of
language
.
--
Earle
.
In
the
Greek
poets
,
as
also
in
Plautus
,
we
shall
see
the
economy
. . .
of
poems
better
observed
than
in
Terence
.
--
B
.
Jonson
.
The
Jews
already
had
a
Sabbath
,
which
,
as
citizens
and
subjects
of
that
economy
,
they
were
obliged
to
keep
.
--
Paley
.
4.
Thrifty
and
frugal
housekeeping
;
management
without
loss
or
waste
;
frugality
in
expenditure
;
prudence
and
disposition
to
save
;
as
,
a
housekeeper
accustomed
to
economy
but
not
to
parsimony
.
Political economy
.
See
under
Political
.
Syn:
--
Economy
,
Frugality
,
Parsimony
.
Economy
avoids
all
waste
and
extravagance
,
and
applies
money
to
the
best
advantage
;
frugality
cuts
off
indulgences
,
and
proceeds
on
a
system
of
saving
.
The
latter
conveys
the
idea
of
not
using
or
spending
superfluously
,
and
is
opposed
to
lavishness
or
profusion
.
Frugality
is
usually
applied
to
matters
of
consumption
,
and
commonly
points
to
simplicity
of
manners
;
parsimony
is
frugality
carried
to
an
extreme
,
involving
meanness
of
spirit
,
and
a
sordid
mode
of
living
.
Economy
is
a
virtue
,
and
parsimony
a
vice
.
I
have
no
other
notion
of
economy
than
that
it
is
the
parent
to
liberty
and
ease
.
--
Swift
.
The
father
was
more
given
to
frugality
,
and
the
son
to
riotousness
[luxuriousness].
--
Golding
.
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