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Wateriness   Listen
Wateriness

noun
1.
The wetness of ground that is covered or soaked with water.  Synonyms: muddiness, sloppiness.  "The water's muddiness made it undrinkable" , "The sloppiness of a rainy November day"
2.
Meagerness or poorness connoted by a superfluity of water (in a literary style as well as in a food).  "The wateriness of his blood" , "No one enjoys the burning of his soup or the wateriness of his potatoes"
3.
The property of resembling the viscosity of water.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Wateriness" Quotes from Famous Books



... was Sarah's name for Pin, on account of her perpetual wateriness. "Be a cry-baby, do." But she was not damped, she was lost in the pleasure ...
— The Getting of Wisdom • Henry Handel Richardson

... self-introspection of the Christian and the eternally recurring question "What shall I do to be saved?"—the comparison is not favorable to the latter. There is (at any rate in modern days) a mawkish milk-and-wateriness about the Christian attitude, and also a painful self-consciousness, which is not pleasant; and though Nietzsche's blonde beast is a sufficiently disagreeable animal, one almost thinks that it were better to be THAT than to go about with one's ...
— Pagan & Christian Creeds - Their Origin and Meaning • Edward Carpenter

... and vaporisation at a third, properties of water, we mean that matter which did not liquefy, congeal, and evaporate at different temperatures would not be water. The habits of exhibiting these phenomena, in conjunction with certain other habits, make up the aquosity or wateriness of water. They are parts of water's nature, and, in the absence of any one of them, water would not be its own self, and could not exist. But in no such sense, nor in any sense whatever, is the life or vitality whereby what we are accustomed to call animated are distinguished from inanimate objects, ...
— Old-Fashioned Ethics and Common-Sense Metaphysics - With Some of Their Applications • William Thomas Thornton



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