Word Meanings - INDIVIDUITY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Separate existence; individuality; oneness. Fuller.
Related words: (words related to INDIVIDUITY)
- ONENESS
The state of being one; singleness in number; individuality; unity. Our God is one, or rather very oneness. Hooker. - SEPARATE
pfref. se- aside + parare to make ready, prepare. See Parade, and cf. 1. To disunite; to divide; to disconnect; to sever; to part in any manner. From the fine gold I separate the alloy. Dryden. Separate thyself, I pray thee, from me. Gen. xiii. - FULLERY
The place or the works where the fulling of cloth is carried on. - INDIVIDUALITY
1. The quality or state of being individual or constituting an individual; separate or distinct existence; oneness; unity. Arbuthnot. They possess separate individualities. H. Spencer. 2. The character or property appropriate or peculiar to an - EXISTENCE
1. The state of existing or being; actual possession of being; continuance in being; as, the existence of body and of soul in union; the separate existence of the soul; immortal existence. The main object of our existence. Lubbock. 2. Continued - FULLER
One whose occupation is to full cloth. Fuller's earth, a variety of clay, used in scouring and cleansing cloth, to imbibe grease. -- Fuller's herb , the soapwort , formerly used to remove stains from cloth. -- Fuller's thistle or weed - INSEPARATE
Not separate; together; united. Shak. - NONEXISTENCE
1. Absence of existence; the negation of being; nonentity. A. Baxter. 2. A thing that has no existence. Sir T. Browne. - ALONENESS
A state of being alone, or without company; solitariness. Bp. Montagu. - PREEXISTENCE
1. Existence in a former state, or previous to something else. Wisdom declares her antiquity and preƫxistence to all the works of this earth. T. Burnet. 2. Existence of the soul before its union with the body; -- a doctrine held by certain - POSTEXISTENCE
Subsequent existence. - INEXISTENCE
Inherence; subsistence. Bp. Hall. That which exists within; a constituent. A. Tucker. - SELF-EXISTENCE
Inherent existence; existence possessed by virtue of a being's own nature, and independent of any other being or cause; -- an attribute peculiar to God. Blackmore. - LONENESS
Solitude; seclusion. Donne. - GONENESS
A state of exhaustion; faintness, especially as resulting from hunger. - PRONENESS
1. The quality or state of being prone, or of bending downward; as, the proneness of beasts is opposed to the erectness of man. 2. The state of lying with the face down; -- opposed to supineness. 3. Descent; declivity; as, the proneness of a hill. - COEXISTENCE
Existence at the same time with another; -- contemporary existence. Without the help, or so much as the coexistence, of any condition. Jer. Taylor. - INCOEXISTENCE
The state of not coexisting. Locke. - INSEPARATELY
Inseparably. Cranmer.