spiritedness

IPA: spˈɪrɪtɪdnʌs

noun

  • (sometimes in combination) The property of being spirited, of having spirit.
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Examples of "spiritedness" in Sentences

  • Your particular blend of incompetence and mean spiritedness is truly galling.
  • It will be a sad day indeed when such public-spiritedness is driven out of British politics.
  • Much of modern history can be explained by the search of what Plato called spiritedness for legitimate self-expression.
  • As Kristol points out in the essay, the meaning of the phrase "public spiritedness" has flipped since the 18th century.
  • Frankly, its affected mean-spiritedness is inexcusably tame, especially when compared to the lurid rarities programmed at each QT Fest.
  • All the no-saying and no-preaching in the world will fail to keep men, and youths growing into manhood, away from John Barleycorn when John Barleycorn is everywhere accessible, and where John Barleycorn is everywhere the connotation of manliness, and daring, and great-spiritedness.
  • It's just not in my nature, really – and has a good line in the deliberately bland: to hear him describe the internet, and Wikipedia, is to hear a tale of public spiritedness, of millions of people working towards a common good, even though he must know that the thing he heads is far stranger and less dependable than that.
  • KAPLAN: Well, I wrote -- there's a chapter called "Clean Toilets," and I think it's the collapse of empires or whatever, and it's just two pages at the beginning of that chapter, and I talked about it because to me the availability and degree of cleanliness of public toilets may offer insights in terms of the public - "spiritedness" and degree of civil society in that place.

Related Links

synonyms for spiritednessdescribing words for spiritedness
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