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Definition of Changelessness
1. Noun. The property of remaining unchanged.
2. Noun. The quality of being unchangeable; having a marked tendency to remain unchanged.
Generic synonyms: Quality
Specialized synonyms: Absoluteness, Constancy, Stability, Innateness, Irreversibility, Invariability, Invariableness, Invariance, Fixedness, Unalterability, Unexchangeability, Fixity, Immutability, Immutableness
Antonyms: Changeableness
Derivative terms: Changeless, Changeless, Unchangeable, Unchangeable, Unchanging, Unchanging
Definition of Changelessness
1. Noun. The state or quality of being changeless. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Changelessness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Changelessness
Literary usage of Changelessness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mornings in the College Chapel: Short Addresses to Young Men on Personal by Francis Greenwood Peabody (1907)
"Yet behind this impressive fact of change there lies the much deeper and much
more steadying idea of the changelessness of God. ..."
2. The shadow of the hand, and other sermons by William A. Gray (1885)
"THE changelessness OF CHEIST. ' Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to-day, and
for ever.' —HEB. xiii. 8. THE connection of these words is somewhat ..."
3. Education by Project Innovation (Organization) (1883)
"... but it was the changelessness that resists progress, and although Christianity
takes up the idea of immutability, it is not the changelessness of action ..."
4. Natural Elements of Revealed Theology Being the Baird Lecture for 1881 by George Matheson (1881)
"The immutability which Christianity emphasizes, is the changelessness of love;
... Christian immutability is not the changelessness of action, ..."
5. Some Views of the Time Problem by Benjamin Whitman Van Riper (1916)
"Temporal change and temporal changelessness are each essentially ... is real
change; but this the Eleatics, with all their passion for changelessness, ..."
6. The God of Philosophy by Francis Aveling (1906)
"the one instant of the ever present changelessness which is God. And just as time
is the measure of motion, so eternity is the measure of perfect rest There ..."