primevalness
English
Alternative forms
Noun
primevalness (uncountable)
- The quality of being primeval.
- [1760, The New Universal Etymological English Dictionary: […], 5th edition, London: […] W. Johnston:
- PRIME´VALNESS } (of primævalus, L. and neſs) the being of the firſt age.]
- 1856, Daniel Shepherd, “The War Path”, in Saratoga. A Story of 1787., New York, N.Y.: W. P. Fetridge & Co., […]. Boston, Mass.: Williams & Co., […], page 369:
- He was traversing a rude forest pathway; bushes and half-decayed stumps lined the track, towering, mossy trees hung solemn and shadowy above him; there was rudeness, savageness, primevalness around him.
- 1861, “Correspondence. Physical and Moral Sciences in Relation to Religion.”, in The Rambler, volume VI, page 389:
- Let any number of new hideous apes be found in Africa, and hailed as a more remote progenitor by enlightened naturalists, I will be satisfied to end my genealogy at the first of the line endowed with reason, instead of pursuing it into the primevalness of ferocity.
- 1872, E. Marlitt, “The Little Princess of the Heath”, in The Ladies’ Repository, a Universalist Monthly Magazine for the Home Circle, volume XLVIII, Boston, Mass.: […] the Universalist Publishing House, page 439:
- This piece of woodland was delightful in its seeming primevalness.
- 1995, Jo Ray McCuen, Readings for Writers, Harcourt Brace College Publishers, →ISBN, page 361:
- Then I sat in that little nook—leaving the door open so I could watch the shadows—thinking about the primevalness of my life.
Synonyms
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