|
Definition of Noticeability
1. Noun. The property of being easy to see and understand.
Generic synonyms: Conspicuousness
Specialized synonyms: Apparency, Apparentness, Blatancy, Predominance, Predomination
Attributes: Noticeable, Unnoticeable, Obvious, Unobvious
Derivative terms: Noticeable, Noticeable, Noticeable, Noticeable, Noticeable, Noticeable, Obvious, Patent, Patent
Definition of Noticeability
1. Noun. The quality of being easy to see or notice. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Noticeability
Literary usage of Noticeability
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Handbook of Severe Disability: A Text for Rehabilitation Counselors, Other edited by Walter C. Stolov, Michael R. Clowers (2000)
"Striving for less noticeability, rather than true cosmesis, is more appropriate.
The noticeability of an artificial hand may be decreased by the use of a ..."
2. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1897)
"And, finally, with the same criterion of noticeability, a specific kind of
difference may be noticeable or not, according to purely mental preparedness of ..."
3. The inheritors: an extravagant story by Joseph Conrad, Ford Madox Ford (1901)
"It was not the noticeability for its own sake that I hated, but the fact that
their relations by their noticeability made me impossible, whilst the notice ..."
4. A History of Psychology by Otto Klemm (1914)
"So that now sensation and stimulus do not enter into any functional relationship,
but the law only tells us how the degree of noticeability of a sensation ..."
5. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1906)
"Increase in area of the stimulus is presumed to be equivalent to an increase in
intensity, as regards its noticeability or its ..."
6. The Gentleman's Magazine (1875)
"... being behind time—a mercy for which Eustace was devoutly grateful—shot into
the station .as he ran down the incline; and thanks to the noticeability of ..."
7. Outlines of Psychology: Based Upon the Results of Experimental Investigation by Oswald Külpe, Edward Bradford Titchener (1909)
"Again, the rapidity of movement had a marked effect upon its noticeability.
Other things equal, ie, the movement limen decreased as the rapidity of movement ..."