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Nothingness   /nˈəθɪŋnəs/   Listen
noun
Nothingness  n.  
1.
Nihility; nonexistence.
2.
The state of being of no value; a thing of no value.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Nothingness" Quotes from Famous Books



... mutual illusion! my heart's desire would never be! I turned away, threw myself on the floor of the cave, and wept. Then I bethought me that her eyes had been a little open, and that now the awful chink out of which nothingness had peered, was gone: it might be that she had opened them for a moment, and was again asleep!—it might be she was awake and holding them close! In either case, life, less or more, must have shut them! I was ...
— Lilith • George MacDonald

... wearily. As he laid her gently back upon the pillows, she sighed softly, her heavy lids unclosed a moment. "I knew you'd come," she murmured. "You'll take care of—of Dorothy—you will—" Her voice trailed off into nothingness; then ...
— Out of the Ashes • Ethel Watts Mumford

... that system of philosophy which rests on the idea that the world is to be redeemed by negation of the will to live, the conquering of all desire—that the highest happiness is the achievement of nirvana, nothingness. This conception finds its highest expression in the quietism and indifferentism of the old Brahmanic religion (if such it can be called), in which holiness was to be obtained by speculative contemplation, which seems to me the quintessence of selfishness. In the reformed Brahmanism called Buddhism, ...
— A Book of Operas - Their Histories, Their Plots, and Their Music • Henry Edward Krehbiel

... darting off on a hyperbolic orbit that forbids it ever to return, or an elliptical one that cannot be closed for hundreds or thousands of years; the tail meantime pointing always away from the sun, and fading to nothingness as the weird voyager recedes into the spatial void whence it came. Not many times need the advent of such an apparition coincide with the outbreak of a pestilence or the death of a Caesar to stamp the race of comets as an ominous clan in the minds ...
— A History of Science, Volume 3(of 5) • Henry Smith Williams

... man continued its headlong course. It was running in a circle of many miles, impelled through the nothingness of night by the dark soul ...
— The Pools of Silence • H. de Vere Stacpoole


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