nativeness

IPA: nˈeɪtɪvnʌs

noun

  • The state or condition of being native.
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Examples of "nativeness" in Sentences

  • Kun readings don't always match up with nativeness nativity?
  • "Yes," he replied in gentle and lingering tones, and its nativeness.
  • Recent papers arguing for the nativeness of L. littorea is Cunningham 2008 and for its exoticness are Chapman et al.
  • THOUGH BOTANISTS first started talking about the idea of nativeness back in the 1830s, for most of history people didn't worry much about the risks of species moving from one place to another.
  • The author of the 2009 Oxford University Press book Invasion Biology,'' Davis has been a leader in the small but vocal group of thinkers who argue that nativeness is simply the wrong lens to use when we think about the environment.
  • I suspect there is some truth in the matter, but I can only note that it is an Asterix comic (where everything is a caricature) and that a reaction such as that of my Viennese friend is to be expected from natives the world over encountering a portrayal of that nativeness (to emphasize the critic's nativeness).
  • Terence, and, above all, the chaster poems of Catullus, not only with the Roman poets of the, so called, silver and brazen ages; but with even those of the Augustan æra: and, on grounds of plain sense and universal logic, to see and assert the superiority of the former in the truth and nativeness, both of their thoughts and diction.
  • The only group of foreigners to have the remotest claim to "nativeness" were the The Samanids (819-999), who were the first in centuries to use Farsi as an official language in centuries and they hired the poet Ferdowsi to write the Persian national epic, Shahnama: The Epic of the KIngs which has been the core of Persian education ever since.

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synonyms for nativenessdescribing words for nativeness
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