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coltishness. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From coltish + -ness.
Noun
coltishness (uncountable)
- The quality of resembling a colt, especially:
- The quality of being lively, playful and undisciplined.
- Synonyms: abandon, exuberance, friskiness, spirit, spiritedness
1839, George Greenwood, Hints on Horsemanship, to a Nephew and Niece; or, Common Sense and Common Errors in Common Riding, London: Edward Moxon, page 94:The grand thing is to get rid of dogged sulks and coltishness—of that wayward, swerving, hesitating gait, which says, “Here’s my foot, and there’s my foot,” or “There is a lion in the street, I cannot go forth!”
1915, Ethel M. Dell, chapter 12, in The Keeper of the Door, New York: A. L. Burt, page 396:“He hasn’t learned the art of taking it gracefully,” said the Major. “But he shouldn’t show temper. It’s a sign of coltishness that I don’t care for.”
“Ah, well, he’s young,” said Daisy, with a sigh. “He’ll get over that.”
1927, Sinclair Lewis, chapter 12, in Elmer Gantry, London: Jonathan Cape, published 1930, page 209:But the day of halcyon October sun was too serene even for his coltishness and sedately they tramped up the hill, swinging their joined hands;
1973, Nelson Algren, “Hand in Hand Through the Greenery”, in The Last Carousel,, New York: Seven Stories Press, page 76:The younger literary generation has come on the run because it’s cold out there. The sobriety, and lack of coltishness, constitute their qualifications for reporting fashions or sports; or teaching “Creative Writing” on another campus. They bespeak a readiness to be cowed in return for a stall in the Establishment barn; at whatever cost in originality.
- The quality of being tall, thin and awkward (usually of a young person).
- Synonym: gangliness
1916, Sheila Kaye-Smith, Sussex Gorse, London: Cassell, published 1922, Prologue, p. 19:Though only a year younger than Reuben, in the midst of the awkward age, his growing limbs quite lacked the coltishness of his brother’s.
- 1952, Agatha Christie (as Mary Westmacott), A Daughter’s a Daughter, New York: Dell, 1976, Book 2, Chapter 1, p. 111,
- Laura Whitstable was struck by her beauty. The awkward touch of coltishness had gone, she was now a remarkably attractive young woman, with a quite unusual loveliness of face and form.
1982, Liza Cody, chapter 3, in Bad Company, New York: Scribner, page 21:The hair was young, but the style was mature, and there was no hint of immaturity in the body. Claire, though small, was in perfect proportion without a trace of either coltishness or puppy-fat.