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Niceness   /nˈaɪsnəs/   Listen
Niceness

noun
1.
A courteous manner that respects accepted social usage.  Synonym: politeness.
2.
The quality of nice.
3.
The quality of being difficult to detect or analyze.  Synonym: subtlety.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Niceness" Quotes from Famous Books



... your niceness, it seems, by asking you a plain question, which your mother's heart is too full of grief to let her ask; and modesty will not let your sister ask; though but the consequence of your actions—and yet it must be answered, before you'll obtain from your father and mother, and us, the notice you ...
— Clarissa, Or The History Of A Young Lady, Volume 8 • Samuel Richardson

... the stupid coachman was going to drive us into the stable-yard, which would quite have stopped the niceness of our first arriving, especially as I caught sight of dear old Mrs. Parsley standing at the front door with her best cap on, all in a flutter to welcome us. (I didn't call her 'dear old Mrs. Parsley' to myself then: it's since I've got to know her. ...
— The Girls and I - A Veracious History • Mary Louisa Stewart Molesworth

... but says, she would not for a thousand pound, unless you would encourage her beforehand as she wishes to be encouraged. One hint I am to give you mean time. It is this: To make a discreet use of your pen and ink. Methinks a young creature of niceness should be less ready to write to one man, when she is designed ...
— Clarissa, Volume 2 (of 9) • Samuel Richardson

... figure in the history of the time. He has obtained the immortality which he so much desired, and we are, therefore, entitled and obliged to scrutinize his conduct with a niceness which would be ungracious and unnecessary in the case of a less distinguished man. After Pharsalia he had concluded that the continuance of the war would be unjustifiable. He had put himself in communication with Antony and Caesar's friend and secretary Oppius, and at ...
— Caesar: A Sketch • James Anthony Froude

... little by little they received their deflection, and were warped from their original rectitude. A 'prude' is now a woman with an over-done affectation of a modesty which she does not really feel, and betraying the absence of the substance by this over-preciseness and niceness about the shadow. Goodness must have gone strangely out of fashion, the corruption of manners must have been profound, before matters could have come to this point. 'Prude,' a French word, means properly virtuous or prudent. [Footnote: [Compare French prude, on the etymology ...
— On the Study of Words • Richard C Trench


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