venerableness
IPA: vˈɛnɝʌbʌɫnʌs
noun
- The condition of being venerable.
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Examples of "venerableness" in Sentences
- There was nothing artificial or upstart about their beauty, but the venerableness of dignity.
- Carlyle was, of course, the more prodigious personality, and had the advantage in the richness and venerableness of the Old World setting.
- Properly their one element of venerableness, of strength of greatness, is, that they at all times correspond therewith as near as by human possibility they can.
- He was a remarkable observer and faithful reporter, never allowing himself, in Ibsen's phrase, to be "frightened by the venerableness of the institution"; and his sublimated journalism reveals
- But the bearing of his collection is toward a closer union of the two bodies of works, and especially of the Atharvan, not to the greater gain in age of the Upanishads so much as to the depreciation in venerableness of the former.
- Before Mr. Alcott took it in hand, it was a mean-looking affair, with two peaked gables; no suggestiveness about it, and no venerableness, although from the style of its construction it seems to have survived beyond its first century.
- The fact that it has, for two hundred years, poured light into the minds of millions, and guided the steps of generation after generation in the way to heaven, has given to it somewhat of the venerableness which appropriately belongs to a book of
- He was a remarkable observer and faithful reporter, never allowing himself, in Ibsens phrase, to be frightened by the venerableness of the institutions; and his sublimated journalism reveals a mastery of the naïvely comic thoroughly human and democratic.
- The writer's charming touch, however, throws a rich brown tone over its rather shallow venerableness; and we are beguiled into believing, for instance, at the close of _Howe's Masquerade_ (a story of a strange occurrence at an entertainment given by Sir William Howe, the last of the Royal Governors, during the siege of Boston by Washington), that
- Isabel's character a sister-spirit, and of the easy venerableness of Mr. Touchett, whose noble tone, as she said, met with her full approval -- her situation at Gardencourt would have been perfectly comfortable had she not conceived an irresistible mistrust of the little lady for whom she had at first supposed herself obliged to "allow" as mistress of the house.
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