ns]
| 1. | the quality of being patient, as the bearing of provocation, annoyance, misfortune, or pain, without complaint, loss of temper, irritation, or the like. |
| 2. | an ability or willingness to suppress restlessness or annoyance when confronted with delay: to have patience with a slow learner. |
| 3. | quiet, steady perseverance; even-tempered care; diligence: to work with patience. |
| 4. | Cards (chiefly British ). solitaire (def. 1). |
| 5. | Also called patience dock. a European dock, Rumex patientia, of the buckwheat family, whose leaves are often used as a vegetable. |
| 6. | Obsolete. leave; permission; sufference. |
| 1. | Also called patience. any of various games played by one person with one or more regular 52-card packs, part or all of which are usually dealt out according to a given pattern, the object being to arrange the cards in a predetermined manner. |
| 2. | a game played by one person alone, as a game played with marbles or pegs on a board having hollows or holes. |
| 3. | a precious stone, esp. a diamond, set by itself, as in a ring. |
| 4. | any of several American thrushes of the genus Myadestes, having short, broad bills and noted for their beautiful songs. |
| 5. | a large extinct flightless bird of the genus Pezophaps, related to the dodo but with a longer neck, smaller bill, and longer legs, that inhabited the Mascarene Islands. |
patience
family of card games played by one person. Solitaire was originally called (in various spellings) either patience, as it still is in England, Poland, and Germany, or cabale, as it still is in Scandinavian countries.
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