Word Meanings - FEEBLENESS - Book Publishers vocabulary database
The quality or condition of being feeble; debility; infirmity. That shakes for age and feebleness. Shak.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of FEEBLENESS)
- Debility
- Weakness
- feebleness
- frailty
- infirmity
- incapacity
- imbecility
- enervation
- lassitude
- languor
- Imbecility
- Feebleness
- senility
- weakness
- dotage
- dilution
- impairment
- decrepitude
- faintness
- inconclusiveness
- worthlessness
- want
Related words: (words related to FEEBLENESS)
- ENERVATION
1. The act of weakening, or reducing strength. 2. The state of being weakened; effeminacy. Bacon. - FRAILTY
1. The condition quality of being frail, physically, mentally, or morally, frailness; infirmity; weakness of resolution; liableness to be deceived or seduced. God knows our frailty, pities our weakness. Locke. 2. A fault proceeding from weakness; - IMBECILITY
The quality of being imbecile; weakness; feebleness, esp. of mind. Cruelty . . . argues not only a depravedness of nature, but also a meanness of courage and imbecility of mind. Sir W. Temple. Note: This term is used specifically to denote natural - IMPAIRMENT
The state of being impaired; injury. "The impairment of my health." Dryden. - FEEBLENESS
The quality or condition of being feeble; debility; infirmity. That shakes for age and feebleness. Shak. - WEAKNESS
1. The quality or state of being weak; want of strength or firmness; lack of vigor; want of resolution or of moral strength; feebleness. 2. That which is a mark of lack of strength or resolution; a fault; a defect. Many take pleasure in spreading - DOTAGE
1. Feebleness or imbecility of understanding or mind, particularly in old age; the childishness of old age; senility; as, a venerable man, now in his dotage. Capable of distinguishing between the infancy and the dotage of Greek literature. - LANGUOR
1. A state of the body or mind which is caused by exhaustion of strength and characterized by a languid feeling; feebleness; lassitude; laxity. 2. Any enfeebling disease. Sick men with divers languors. Wyclif . 3. Listless indolence; dreaminess. - DEBILITY
The state of being weak; weakness; feebleness; languor. The inconveniences of too strong a perspiration, which are debility, faintness, and sometimes sudden death. Arbuthnot. Syn. -- Debility, Infirmity, Imbecility. An infirmity belongs, for the - DECREPITUDE
The broken state produced by decay and the infirmities of age; infirm old age. - LANGUOROUS
Producing, or tending to produce, languor; characterized by languor. Whom late I left in languorous constraint. Spenser. To wile the length from languorous hours, and draw The sting from pain. Tennyson. - INCAPACITY
Want of legal ability or competency to do, give, transmit, or receive something; inability; disqualification; as, the inacapacity of minors to make binding contracts, etc. Syn. -- Inability; incapability; incompetency; unfitness; disqualification; - INFIRMITY
1. The state of being infirm; feebleness; an imperfection or weakness; esp., an unsound, unhealthy, or debilitated state; a disease; a malady; as, infirmity of body or mind. 'T is the infirmity of his age. Shak. 2. A personal frailty or failing; - FAINTNESS
1. The state of being faint; loss of strength, or of consciousness, and self-control. 2. Want of vigor or energy. Spenser. 3. Feebleness, as of color or light; lack of distinctness; as, faintness of description. 4. Faint-heartedness; timorousness; - LASSITUDE
A condition of the body, or mind, when its voluntary functions are performed with difficulty, and only by a strong exertion of the will; languor; debility; weariness. The corporeal instruments of action being strained to a high pitch . . . will - SENILITY
The quality or state of being senile; old age. - DILUTION
The act of diluting, or the state of being diluted. Arbuthnot. - ANECDOTAGE
Anecdotes collectively; a collection of anecdotes. All history, therefore, being built partly, and some of it altogether, upon anecdotage, must be a tissue of lies. De Quincey.