From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishself-disciplineˌself-ˈdiscipline noun [uncountable] CONTROLthe ability to make yourself do the things you know you ought to do, without someone making you do them A lot of the kids seemed to lack self-discipline. —self-disciplined adjective
Examples from the Corpus
self-discipline• Taking part in plays teaches kids focus and self-discipline.• We try to teach the children self-reliance and self-discipline.• Obviously knowledge as well as self-discipline is necessary to prevent accidents and maintain a safe environment.• Both demonstrated self-discipline by keeping their answers within the time allowed under debate rules negotiated by the rival campaigns.• I don't know if I've enough self-discipline to work full-time and go to night school.• His self-discipline had been forged and tempered by years of training.• Hence they have too little self-discipline, too little sense of the appropriate.• Ideally, it promotes self-discipline, controlled aggression and individual sacrifice in the interest of the team.• If there is not some self-discipline, that is exactly what happens.• They lacked the academic habits and the self-discipline of some of the others; their relative fluency masked deeper problems.• And, in part, they are not successful because they lack the self-discipline to stay on task.