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Straightness   Listen
Straightness

noun
1.
(of hair) lack of a tendency to curl.  Antonym: curliness.
2.
Freedom from crooks or curves or bends or angles.  Antonym: crookedness.
3.
Trueness of course toward a goal.  Synonym: directness.  Antonym: indirectness.
4.
Having honest intentions.  Synonym: good faith.  "Doubt was expressed as to the good faith of the immigrants"
5.
A sexual attraction to (or sexual relations with) persons of the opposite sex.  Synonyms: heterosexualism, heterosexuality.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Straightness" Quotes from Famous Books



... under its burnt-brown hair was candid; her firm little chin just dimpled. Altogether, a face difficult to take one's eyes off. But Nedda was far from vain, and her face seemed to her too short and broad, her eyes too dark and indeterminate, neither gray nor brown. The straightness of her nose was certainly comforting, but it, too, was short. Being creamy in the throat and browning easily, she would have liked to be marble-white, with blue dreamy eyes and fair hair, or else like a Madonna. And was she tall enough? Only five foot five. And her arms ...
— Forsyte Saga • John Galsworthy

... pleased me and the fragrance of its flowers and the carolling of its birds; so I entered, thinking to gaze on it awhile and wend my way." Said she, "With love and gladness!"; and Masrur was amazed at the sweetness of her speech and the coquetry of her glances and the straightness of her shape, and transported by her beauty and seemlihead and the pleasantness of the garden and the birds. So in the disorder of his ...
— The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 8 • Richard F. Burton

... delicately refined away towards the chin to be in full and fair proportion with the upper part; that the nose, in escaping the aquiline bend (always hard and cruel in a woman, no matter how abstractedly perfect it may be), has erred a little in the other extreme, and has missed the ideal straightness of line; and that the sweet, sensitive lips are subject to a slight nervous contraction, when she smiles, which draws them upward a little at one corner, towards the cheek. It might be possible to note these blemishes in another woman's face but it is not easy to dwell on them in hers, so ...
— The Woman in White • Wilkie Collins

... to the window, and looked across the wide stretch of meadow-land and woodland on which the chateau, set on the very crown of the ridge, looked down. The road, running with the irritating straightness of so many of the roads of France, was visible for a full ...
— Arsene Lupin • Edgar Jepson

... in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire and Yorkshire. In buildings of this class, all embellishment and ornament, however simple, which good taste, had it been consulted, might have suggested, to relieve the wearying straightness of outline, or the plain dull flatness of these large ponderous masses of brick and mortar, have been neglected, or rejected, probably as not increasing its productive powers, and therefore unworthy of consideration. Such has been the general principle. ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 327 - Vol. 53, January, 1843 • Various


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