¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Terminableness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Terminableness
Literary usage of Terminableness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on Medical Jurisprudence by Francis Wharton, Moreton Stillé (1860)
"... the evidence was rested on the fecundity and in- terminableness of collateral
issues ; and Mr. Chitty seems to have had a glimpse of the same idea, ..."
2. System of Christian Doctrine by Carl Immanuel Nitzsch (1849)
"... the unde- terminableness of the Divine will cannot be so well opposed by ^he
human will, or by the immutability of things, as can rather, in part, ..."
3. Spiritual Magazine (1871)
"Sunday; and in a leading article on " The Unseen World," the editor writes thus :—
The Destructionists, or believers in the terminableness of soul-life, ..."
4. The Old Law and the New Order by George William Alger (1913)
"Another and more general form of legal in- terminableness is of a different kind.
It is caused by the re-trial of the same case over and over again, ..."
5. An Atlas of the normal and pathological nervous systems: Together with a by Christfried Jakob, Joseph Collins (1896)
"... mannerless, changeable manifestation of the convulsions, the terminableness
of the attack, and the susceptibility of the ..."
6. A History of Elizabethan Literature by George Saintsbury (1912)
"The text of these works was conveyed by his heirs to the University of Oxford,
and long remained an exception to the general rule of the terminableness of ..."