-nesse. <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span> (uncountable) coldness (lack of heat) coldness (lack of emotion) frigidity; impotence English: coldness Scots: cauldness “<span class="searchmatch">cōldnesse</span>, n.”...
From closed + -ness. closedness (uncountable) The property of being closed. <span class="searchmatch">coldnesses</span>...
[ˈt͡ʃæ͜ɑɫd.nes] ċealdnes f coldness, cold Strong ō-stem: Middle English: <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span>, *caldnesse English: coldness Scots: caldnes, cauldnes Joseph Bosworth...
From Middle English <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span>, from Old English cealdness, cealdnys (“coldness”), from Proto-West Germanic *kaldanassī (“coldness”), equivalent to cold...
arghnesse bareynnesse behovelynesse bisynes bisynesse burynes clennesse <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span> cowardnesse crabbednes cruelnesse depnesse derknesse dombenesse doughtynesse...
Islip, →OCLC, signature Rr, verso, column 2: Froid: m. Cold, cooth[sic]; <span class="searchmatch">coldneſſe</span>, chilneſſe. 1842, Fanny Burney, Diary and Letters of Madame D'Arblay:...
disperse Forme, order, beauty through the universe; While drynesse moisture, <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span> heat resists, All that we have, and that we are subsists: 1794, Erasmus...
pissed, so as both vrines be mingled together, shall immediatly find a <span class="searchmatch">coldnesse</span> and astonishment in his loines, (obsolete) Loss of mental faculties, inability...
confine unto the remote activity of the Sun, or the common operation of <span class="searchmatch">coldneſſe</span> in the earth, but may more ſafely referre it unto a lapidificall ſuccity...