Definition of Intolerableness

1. Noun. The state of being intolerable or insufferable. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Intolerableness

1. [n -ES]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Intolerableness

intituled
intitules
intituling
intiv
intl.
into
into't
into detail
into the bargain
into the wind
into thin air
intoe
intoed
intolerability
intolerable
intolerableness (current term)
intolerably
intolerance
intolerances
intolerancy
intolerant
intolerant of(p)
intolerantly
intolerantness
intolerants
intolerated
intolerating
intoleration
intomb
intombed

Literary usage of Intolerableness

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 (1893)
"It would then, not be easy to refute the proposition that painful- ness is intolerableness ; that so-called pains have no other common class-attribute. ..."

2. Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1895)
"It would, then, not be easy to refute the proposition that painfulness is intolerableness; that so-called pains have no other common class-attribute. ..."

3. The Works of President Edwards by Jonathan Edwards (1809)
"Their punishment is more particularly represented in three things, viz. The intolerableness, the ... The intolerableness of it: Can thine heart endure ? (2. ..."

4. The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor by Jeremy Taylor, Charles Page Eden, Reginald Heber, Alexander Taylor (1850)
"... of our Judge by the intolerableness of an evil conscience; if guilt will make a man despair, and despair will make a man mad, confounded and dissolved ..."

5. The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor...: With an Essay by Jeremy Taylor (1851)
"... and the intolerableness, the obliquity and the unreasonableness, the amazement and the disorder, the smart and the sorrow, the guilt and the punishment, ..."

6. Reason, Thought, and Language; Or, The Many and the One: A Revised System of by Douglas Macleane (1906)
"If we say (intensively), Dullness is an attribute of some books (Hamiltonian sumption); intolerableness is an attribute of dull things (H. subsumption); ..."

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