¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fadedness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fadedness
Literary usage of Fadedness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1877)
"An entomologist in looking over his cabinet is able to say "from the intensity
or fadedness of the colors" about what sort of a locality furnished such and ..."
2. Fine Prints by Frederick Wedmore (1910)
"In the rare, splendid Dance of Damsels— " Dance of Four Women," it ought rather
to be, for in one of its little-draped figures the gravity and fadedness of ..."
3. The Sunday Magazine by Thomas Guthrie, William Garden Blaikie, Benjamin Waugh (1877)
"The other shops in the street present a uniform fadedness, and blackness of
appearance, the result of the dust and ..."
4. Vagabonding Down the Andes: Being the Narrative of a Journey, Chiefly Afoot by Harry Alverson Franck (1917)
"I was bowed to an ancient couch at one side of the dismal adobe room, the secretary,
in an aged overcoat of various degrees of fadedness and an enormous ..."
5. The Consolations of Science: Or, Contributions from Science to the Hope of by Jacob Straub (1888)
"On the contrary, increase of age, in a general way, would stand for increase of
attainments, whereof instead of more paralysis, wrinkles, and fadedness ..."
6. Searchings in the Silence: A Series of Devotional Meditations / by George by George Matheson (1895)
"Take away the weariness, the jadedness, the fadedness, that follows the hour of
struggle. Heal the shrinking of the sinew that succeeds to the angel's ..."
7. Summarized Proceedings ... and a Directory of Members by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1877)
"An entomologist in looking over his cabinet is able to say "from the intensity
or fadedness of the colors" about what sort of a ..."