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  1. Dictionary
    decorum
    /dɪˈkɔːrəm/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. behavior that is socially correct, calm, and polite: The witness endured the lawyer’s badgering with remarkable decorum.

  3. 1. : literary and dramatic propriety : fitness. according to strict neoclassic decorum only the aristocracy had the right to appear in tragedy Irving Babbitt. 2. : propriety and good taste in conduct or appearance. strict in her notions of decorum Jane Austen. 3. : orderliness. the organization's decorum has rarely been shaken W. F. Longgood. 4.

  4. behavior that is socially correct, calm, and polite: The witness endured the lawyer’s badgering with remarkable decorum.

  5. Decorum is proper and polite behavior. If you let out a big belch at a fancy dinner party, you're not showing much decorum. This noun is from Latin decōrus "proper, becoming, handsome," from décor "beauty, grace," which is also the source of English décor.

  6. Decorum definition: dignified propriety of behavior, speech, dress, etc.. See examples of DECORUM used in a sentence.

  7. Define decorum. decorum synonyms, decorum pronunciation, decorum translation, English dictionary definition of decorum. n. 1. Appropriateness of behavior or conduct; propriety: "In the Ireland of the 1940's ... the stolidity of a long, empty, grave face was thought to be the...

  8. Decorum is behaviour that people consider to be correct, polite, and respectable. [ formal ] I was treated with decorum and respect throughout the investigation.