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Lifelessness   Listen
Lifelessness

noun
1.
A state of no motion or movement.  Synonyms: motionlessness, stillness.  Antonym: motion.
2.
Not having life.  Synonym: inanimateness.  Antonym: animateness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Lifelessness" Quotes from Famous Books



... branches of education, the teaching of languages struck me with especial force as defective, on account of its great imperfection, its capriciousness and lifelessness. The search for a satisfactory method for our native language occupied me in preference to anything else. I proceeded on the ...
— Autobiography of Friedrich Froebel • Friedrich Froebel

... no malice in her flat statement, no envy. Sidney and she, living in the world of the Street, occupied different spheres. But the very lifelessness in her voice told how remotely such things touched her, and thus was tragic. "Mealers" came and went—small clerks, petty tradesmen, husbands living alone in darkened houses during the summer hegira ...
— K • Mary Roberts Rinehart

... be gainsaid that the lifelessness and emptiness of the State Church, with its hireling and often ignorant priesthood, fails to satisfy the great mind of Russia—the peasant mind—but now awakening from its long infant slumber, as did the mind of Western Europe three centuries ago. Next perhaps to the extreme literalness ...
— Russia - As Seen and Described by Famous Writers • Various

... her hands in his own. But the fingers lay with unanswering coldness and lifelessness for a second in his clasp and then were drawn away and took determinate hold of the chair-back. Again the flush came to Fleda's cheeks, brought by a sharp pain,—oh, bodily and mental too!—and after a moment's pause, with a ...
— Queechy • Susan Warner

... are being passed around him; so that however wide, searching and vigorous may be his powers of observation, thought and intellect, he cannot liberate these from contemporary associations; any endeavour to do that must end in failure, ending, as it must, in artificial coldness and unemotional lifelessness. Bracciolini never made the attempt; he gave way to Nature, and never did his genius shine so brightly, and never was it more prolific, than when dealing with the diversity required of it by the history ...
— Tacitus and Bracciolini - The Annals Forged in the XVth Century • John Wilson Ross


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