comprehensiveness

IPA: kɑmprihˈɛnsɪvnʌs

noun

  • The state of being comprehensive.
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Examples of "comprehensiveness" in Sentences

  • Information adds the comprehensiveness of the article.
  • That's not convincing of the comprehensiveness of the coverage.
  • Our benefits were astonishing in comprehensiveness and quality of care.
  • As a guide to action, though, the 'comprehensiveness' ideal suggests trying to be all things to all people.
  • Like Big Bang cosmology or Neo-Darwinism, the theory of intelligent design in biology is not religious because it lacks "comprehensiveness" and is
  • But the marvel of his comprehensiveness is his mode of dealing with the vulgar, the vicious, and the low, -- with persons who are commonly spurned as dolts and knaves.
  • When asked if Google is interested in striking a deal like this with Facebook, Mayer said, "We're interested in comprehensiveness, which is a fundamental element of search.
  • The Church of England has always taken pride in its "comprehensiveness" - a British tolerance for theological diversity dating to Queen Elizabeth I, who combined element of Catholicism and Protestant ism to form a "bridge" between the two traditions.
  • By the same token, while epic always retained certain essential elements (like scope), new topics meant new challenges to the boundary of the genre; apocalyptic epics, as Tucker points out, certainly brought new meaning to the term "comprehensiveness" (249).
  • In the methods laid down by them for teaching boys, for the thorough education of boys as part of one great human family, -- that is, for their higher instruction, -- I failed to find that comprehensiveness which is alone sufficient to satisfy the human being.

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synonyms for comprehensivenessdescribing words for comprehensiveness
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