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Dimness   Listen
noun
Dimness  n.  
1.
The state or quality being dim; lack of brightness, clearness, or distinctness; dullness; obscurity.
2.
Dullness, or want of clearness, of vision or of intellectual perception.
Synonyms: Darkness; obscurity; gloom. See Darkness.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Dimness" Quotes from Famous Books



... black, gloved hands were tightly twisted together in her lap, and she allowed her plump body to wag quite loosely with the motion of the carriage, making no attempt at resistance. She had really the appearance of a corpse sitting up. The tarpaulin flapped monotonously. The coachman cried out in the dimness to his horses like a bird, prolonging his call drearily, and then violently cracking his whip. Domini kept her eyes fixed on the loose tarpaulin, so that she might not miss one of the wet visions it discovered ...
— The Garden Of Allah • Robert Hichens

... as scenes flashed by the sun on the plates of photography! True, the pictures were perhaps now slightly fading into the similitude of pale negatives, . . but still, would not everything that happened in the ACTUAL world merge into that same undecided dimness with the ...
— Ardath - The Story of a Dead Self • Marie Corelli

... Hamilton went forward and seated himself in the first of these rows. The tom-toms had ceased: there was quiet, an interval of rest presumably for the dancers. It was far cooler than outside, and Hamilton breathed a sigh of relief as he sank into his seat. The dimness of the light, the quiet, the coolness all pleased him: he had not known till he sat down how tired he was. He might have sat there a quarter of an hour, his mind in that state of hopeless blank that supervenes ...
— Six Women • Victoria Cross

... "pirate," turning on Owen his lusterless sea-green eyes, faded by much grog to a dimness that reminded one of the faint lights set in ships' decks and known as "dead-eyes." "No, but your porthole idea is just the scheme to get at him and get rid of him. I can slip down a rope tonight when all is quiet and the fool passengers are over on the other side looking ...
— The Perils of Pauline • Charles Goddard

... pleasant sight truly, and there was a dimness in the rector's eyes, as he stood at the head of a long table, at two o'clock on Christmas-day, to say grace before the dinner spread for those ...
— Run to Earth - A Novel • M. E. Braddon


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