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Topic: They used most times interchangeably, What is the difference between them (Read 44 times)

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I don't know, I've never thought about it at all. It seems to me that discipline affects the face, the neatness of a person, the cleanliness of his head and clothes.

What you said makes sense on a personal basis, but you did not emphasize it on others.
Also, how about wickness
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I don't know, I've never thought about it at all. It seems to me that discipline affects the face, the neatness of a person, the cleanliness of his head and clothes.
member
Activity: 213
Merit: 24


Some people do not take time to take a look into attitudes (theirs and that of the other people). On this, they go misinterpreting discipline for wickness and wickness for discipline. But most times, it is discipline that is misinterpreted for wickness.
Keeps wondering how obvious it's that the dictionary can't do the differentiation. I believe psychologically looking into the attitude / behavior and reasoning behind every act will go along way to catapult these different.

If you ask me, wickness most times happens without any valid causes to talk of person being so angry over what has been done against them. Wickness happens most time because the person or people behind it just love to see others in painful situations.

How can one really differentiate between discipline and wickness?   What do think?



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