¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Headlessness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Headlessness
Literary usage of Headlessness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Scottish Chapbook Literature by William Harvey (1903)
"The phantom immediately came forward to the bed, and setting its forefeet on the
stock, looked steadfastly in all its awful headlessness at the unfortunate ..."
2. The American Historical Review by American historical association (1899)
"At court he found the greatest confusion and headlessness. The only man in the
royal family, William, had been sent away to hide himself. ..."
3. Putnam's Monthly (1907)
"... would have delighted Amy March; here and there a broken and weather-beaten
statue of stone or marble, poked its head or its headlessness ..."
4. The Dial edited by Francis Fisher Browne (1908)
"... men of natural gifts and educated taste, experienced in the humanities, there
would be no mob ; for the condition of headlessness, of unguided- ness, ..."
5. The Dial edited by Francis Fisher Browne (1908)
"... if there were critics, men of natural gifts and educated taste, experienced
in the humanities, there would be no mob ; for the condition of headlessness ..."
6. The New American Type: And Other Essays by Henry Dwight Sedgwick (1908)
"If there were critics, men of natural gifts and educated taste, experienced in
the humanities, there would be no mob; for the condition of headlessness, ..."