Definition of Irreplaceableness

1. Noun. The quality of being irreplaceable.

Generic synonyms: Unexchangeability
Derivative terms: Irreplaceable

Lexicographical Neighbors of Irreplaceableness

irremovable
irremovably
irremunerable
irrenowned
irrep
irreparability
irreparable
irreparableness
irreparably
irreparate
irrepealability
irrepealable
irrepentance
irreplaceability
irreplaceable
irreplaceableness (current term)
irreplaceably
irreplicability
irreplicable
irreprehensible
irrepresentable
irrepressibility
irrepressible
irrepressibly
irreproachable
irreproachableness
irreproachably
irreproducibility
irreproducible
irreproducibly

Literary usage of Irreplaceableness

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The English Illustrated Magazine (1900)
"... are becoming very rare, for they have attained that dignity of age and irreplaceableness which forms the starting-point of the collecting hobby. ..."

2. The Literary World by Samuel R. Crocker, Edward Abbott, Nicholas Paine Gilman, Madeline Vaughan Abbott Bushnell, Bliss Carman, Herbert Copeland (1886)
"... a singular illustration of the costliness and irreplaceableness of some forms of literary labor. and that in line 9 for "1167" should be read loco. ..."

3. An Introduction to Philosophy by Orlin Ottman Fletcher (1913)
"The quality of irreplaceableness has its fullest exemplification in the self-conscious individuum. No other person's consciousness can replace yours. ..."

4. Essays & Addresses on the Philosophy of Religion by Friedrich Hügel, Friedrich H̀eugel (1921)
"I will, thirdly, indicate the still larger evidences for the abiding need, the strict irreplaceableness of the Church, notwithstanding all that de facto ..."

5. From a College Window by Arthur Christopher Benson (1906)
"For nature tends to replace rather than to heal; and the sadness of life consists for most of us in the irreplaceableness of the things we love and lose. ..."

6. Why Women are So by Mary Roberts Coolidge (1912)
"The element of irreplaceableness in determining use and value, which now applies to only a few accessories of dress, such as lace, jewels, rare shawls, ..."

7. The English Illustrated Magazine (1900)
"... are becoming very rare, for they have attained that dignity of age and irreplaceableness which forms the starting-point of the collecting hobby. ..."

8. The Literary World by Samuel R. Crocker, Edward Abbott, Nicholas Paine Gilman, Madeline Vaughan Abbott Bushnell, Bliss Carman, Herbert Copeland (1886)
"... a singular illustration of the costliness and irreplaceableness of some forms of literary labor. and that in line 9 for "1167" should be read loco. ..."

9. An Introduction to Philosophy by Orlin Ottman Fletcher (1913)
"The quality of irreplaceableness has its fullest exemplification in the self-conscious individuum. No other person's consciousness can replace yours. ..."

10. Essays & Addresses on the Philosophy of Religion by Friedrich Hügel, Friedrich H̀eugel (1921)
"I will, thirdly, indicate the still larger evidences for the abiding need, the strict irreplaceableness of the Church, notwithstanding all that de facto ..."

11. From a College Window by Arthur Christopher Benson (1906)
"For nature tends to replace rather than to heal; and the sadness of life consists for most of us in the irreplaceableness of the things we love and lose. ..."

12. Why Women are So by Mary Roberts Coolidge (1912)
"The element of irreplaceableness in determining use and value, which now applies to only a few accessories of dress, such as lace, jewels, rare shawls, ..."

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