¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Moodinesses
1. moodiness [n] - See also: moodiness
Lexicographical Neighbors of Moodinesses
Literary usage of Moodinesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1858)
"He troubles her a little now and then, it is said, with whiffs of jealousy; but
they are whiffs only, the product of accidental moodinesses in him, ..."
2. History of Friedrich II of Prussia: Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle, Henry Duff Traill (1897)
"He troubles her a little now and then, it is said, with whiffs of jealousy; but
they are whiffs only, the product of accidental moodinesses in ..."
3. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1858)
"1 lousy; but they are whiffs only, the product of accidental moodinesses in him,
or of transient aspects, misinterpreted, in the court-life of a young and ..."
4. Moral Uses of Dark Things by Horace Bushnell (1881)
"... probably enough, the people of the hundredth generation after us will get to
be so well aware of what their moods and moodinesses mean, as to rectify, ..."
5. Carlyle's Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1916)
"He troubles her a little now and then, it is said, with whiffs of jealousy; but
they are whiffs only, the product of accidental moodinesses in him, ..."