Definition of Brand-newness

1. Noun. The property of being very new.

Generic synonyms: Newness
Derivative terms: Brand-new

Lexicographical Neighbors of Brand-newness

branchiura
branchless
branchlet
branchlets
branchlike
branchline
branchlines
brancht
branchwork
branchy
brand
brand-name
brand-name drug
brand-names
brand-new
brand-newness (current term)
brand avatar
brand geese
brand goose
brand image
brand images
brand linkage
brand name
brand names
brand new
brand spanking new
brand spore
brand stretch
brandable
brandade

Literary usage of Brand-newness

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

1. The Journal of English and Germanic Philology by Ill.) University of Illinois (Urbana (1922)
"... emphasis on the brand-newness of this company would have point only if it followed soon after the event. I therefore would date the play about the ..."

2. Our Old Home, and English Note-books by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1883)
"This brand-newness makes it much less effective than if it had been lived in; and I felt pretty much as if I were strolling through any other renewed house. ..."

3. French Cathedrals, Monasteries and Abbeys, and Sacred Sites of France by Elizabeth Robins Pennell (1909)
"... where St. Front was so far away that its brand-newness was not quite so aggressive, and where, as the restorer could not tamper with the little hill on ..."

4. Princeton Stories by Jesse Lynch Williams (1906)
"... for all this brand-newness as he had toward those old landmarks he loved so well. Indeed, it all seemed small and puny viewed in this light, ..."

5. Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science by National Association for the Promotion of Social Science (Great Britain) (1883)
"As to brand-newness, one of the features of Worcester Cathedral which had been referred to as an abomination, was that it was so highly coloured. ..."

6. Reminiscences and Opinions of Sir Francis Hastings Doyle, 1813-1885 by Francis Hastings Charles Doyle (1887)
"... a state of brand-newness and absolute perfection till the day of judgment at least, if the lease lasted as long. Lord Westminster's agents were not slow ..."

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