Word for the day comport

com·port

kəmˈpôrt/

verb

1. formal conduct oneself; behave.
"articulate students who comported themselves well in television interviews"
synonyms: behave, conduct oneself, act, acquit oneself; archaicdeport oneself
"try to comport yourself with a little dignity"

2. accord with; agree with.
"the actions that comport with her own liberal views"

In Charles Dickens' novel Bleak House the character of Old Mr. Turveydrop refers incessantly to his comportment.
 

Way back when ladies were ladies and men were gentlemen, didn't they have classes in comportment for young girls?
 
I think I've read this or heard this somewhere, maybe in a Jane Austen novel about how young ladies must comport themselves.
 
Back in the olden days when I was in school and dinosaurs roamed the earth, our report cards reflected a mark in comportment. Mine was usually not good, not bad, but...um...marginal.
 

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