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Keenness   Listen
Keenness

noun
1.
A quick and penetrating intelligence.  Synonyms: acuity, acuteness, sharpness.  "I admired the keenness of his mind"
2.
A positive feeling of wanting to push ahead with something.  Synonyms: avidity, avidness, eagerness.
3.
Thinness of edge or fineness of point.  Synonym: sharpness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Keenness" Quotes from Famous Books



... had not a word to say. All was up now, of course; the Japs prosecuted the search with renewed keenness, and the nature of our ...
— Under the Dragon Flag - My Experiences in the Chino-Japanese War • James Allan

... account of this voyage, given in the Biog. Brit. "If I knew the rascal's name," says he, "I would hang it up, as far as lies in my power, to everlasting infamy!" Undoubtedly it richly deserved such treatment, but there was no necessity for the doctor exhibiting such keenness ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 16 • Robert Kerr

... great measures, executive or administrative, on which he had set his mark, his various speeches and letters, more especially the full and frank communications which he addressed from time to time to the Secretary of State for India, Sir Charles Wood, show with what keenness of interest, as well as with what sagacity, he approached the study of Indian questions. A few extracts from his correspondence are here given to illustrate this; and as affording some indication of the unremitting industry with which he laboured at this period, ...
— Letters and Journals of James, Eighth Earl of Elgin • James, Eighth Earl of Elgin

... seems to have passed—that heart-breaking era of the Great War. And now the Native Son has entered into and emerged from a new and terrible game. He has needed—and I doubt not displayed—all that he has of strength, natural and developed; of keenness and coolness; of bravery and fortitude; of capacity to endure and ...
— The Native Son • Inez Haynes Irwin

... paving. As for the outside, Nature, in the ample time that had been given her, had so mingled her filings and effacements with the marks of human wear and tear upon the house, that it was often hard to say in which of the two or if in both, any particular obliteration had its origin. The keenness was gone from the mouldings of the doorways, but whether worn out by the rubbing past of innumerable people's shoulders, and the moving of their heavy furniture, or by Time in a grander and more abstract form, did not appear. The iron stanchions inside the window-panes were eaten away to the size ...
— The Trumpet-Major • Thomas Hardy


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