¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Completenesses
1. completeness [n] - See also: completeness
Lexicographical Neighbors of Completenesses
Literary usage of Completenesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1913)
"It may be that some of these incompletenesses and over-completenesses are intrinsic
to the substitution of processes of one kind for those of another. ..."
2. Genetic Theory of Reality: Being the Outcome of Genetic Logic as Issuing in by James Mark Baldwin (1915)
"There is a sort of generalisation of completenesses, of perfections. The single
work of art is such because it is read as something self-contained and ..."
3. Pickett's Men: A Fragment of War History by Walter Harrison (1870)
"... etc., elsewhere published, hare ^Ató completenesses been secured by the fullest
possible sources of information. Accuracy has been attained by deferring ..."
4. The Theosophist by Theosophical Society (Madras, India) (1609)
"It marks off quantity, whether positive or negative, in completenesses, tens,
hundreds, thousands ; always in multiples of ten. ..."
5. The Cathedral: Its Necessary Place in the Life and Work of the Church by Edward White Benson (1878)
"... it follows that a chapter must have two real completenesses ; namely, separately
and in conjunction with the bishop; and hence that it has two heads, ..."
6. Dwight's Journal of Music: A Paper of Art and Literature by John Sullivan Dwight (1859)
"She was one of those rare completenesses of character for whom their share of
happiness in this world seems just enough. In the last hour of her life she ..."