spasmodicness

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From spasmodic +‎ -ness.

Noun[edit]

spasmodicness (uncountable)

  1. (rare) The quality of being spasmodic.
    Synonyms: (rare) spasmodicality, spasmodicalness, spasmodicity
    • 1936 February 27, Jack Houts, “[Rosston Dept.] Methodist Church: Sermon Squibs”, in The Harper County Journal, volume XXXII, number 4, Buffalo, Okla., page two, column 1:
      The sudden changes in temperature is equal to the spasmodicness of the Spiritual thermometer.
    • 1947 May, William Ward Ayer, “The Marks of a Mature Christian”, in Marked Men: A Study of the Well-Defined Characteristics of Biblical Men Who Manifested Those Vices or Virtues Which Are Still Blighting or Blessing the Religious World, Grand Rapids, Mich.: W[illia]m B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, page 91:
      Let me tell you two stories, the first illustrating the spasmodicness of most Christians—marking their immaturity—and the second showing how a child of God may attain unto great things.
    • 1949, Patricia Ann Rapp, Contemporary American Piano Music, Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin, →OCLC, pages 13–14:
      The other elements of the atonal style are the disjunctness of the melodic line which progresses by leaps and bounds, a sometimes almost self-conscious experimentation with a certain spasmodicness of rhythmic phrase, and a mixture of imagination and logic in the omission of the "unessentials" of form.
    • 1959, Bulletin of the International Federation of Building and Woodworkers, volume 10, page 245:
      Naturally the instability and spasmodicness of building under these conditions cannot be said to be favourable for the development of rationalisation.
    • 1986 June, Encyclopedia of World Problems and Human Potential[1], Munich: K.G. Saur Verlag KG, →ISBN:
      VD3704 Spasmodicness / VD3866 Turbulence / VD3966 Upset
    • 2000, Chelsea, volumes 68–69, page 99:
      They give no evidence of issuing from an interior of coherent step-by-step attention to and progressive general evaluation of the subject, proof of intensive study of which they are supposed to provide. Spasmodicness of concern with the subject itself, in its particulars or its total effect, is a common feature of feministic literary criticism and literary consciousness.
    • 2001, International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music, volumes 32–33, page 103:
      Thus the area within which the effective moment of the index narrows primarily to dynamic gesture, directed towards the local situation. Its simultaneity with the ambition towards more defined developmental processes — like for example the rise from 134 towards the culminating point — does in so doing result in a certain tension, even a certain spasmodicness.
    • 2002, Ľubomír Lipták, translated by Martin C. Styan and Sharon Miklošová, edited by Elena Mannová, Changes of Changes: Society and Politics in Slovakia in the 20th Century (Studia Historica Slovaca; 22), Bratislava: Academic Electronic Press, →ISBN, page 137:
      The regional press also gives a better reflection of the real place of politics in the hierarchy of interests of the population. It confirms the modest place of politics, its spasmodicness and campaign character, and the strong “personification” of each political orientation in one or more personalities.