De·cen·cy n.; pl. Decencies
  1. The quality or state of being decent, suitable, or becoming, in words or behavior; propriety of form in social intercourse, in actions, or in discourse; proper formality; becoming ceremony; seemliness; hence, freedom from obscenity or indecorum; modesty.
     Observances of time, place, and of decency in general.   --Burke.
  Immodest words admit of no defense,
  For want of decency is want of sense.   --Roscommon.
  2. That which is proper or becoming.
     The external decencies of worship.   --Atterbury.
  Those thousand decencies, that daily flow
  From all her words and actions.   --Milton.
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