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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
likeness
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
good
▪ A fair painting; free in style but at the same time a good likeness.
■ VERB
bear
▪ Her brother Jonna bore a startling likeness to their father; so much so that he looked like a younger version.
▪ Formal operational schemes, such as proportion and probability, bear a closer likeness to scientific reasoning.
see
▪ Would he perhaps see a likeness?
▪ Getting closer, I saw the family likeness.
▪ She was back at Madame Tussaud's to see her own likeness unveiled in the world's most celebrated Hall of Fame.
▪ What you see is a three-dimensional likeness projected into space, at a distance from the plate.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Dmitri claimed there was a likeness, but I could never see it.
▪ He likens creation to a painter mixing just four pigments to form the likenesses of all things.
▪ His own likeness appears squeezed in above his initials in the right-hand corner.
▪ In the first place, coins can supply portraits of persons for whom we have no other likeness.
▪ In this church we have a striking and unusual likeness of a home.
▪ Jonas's expression hardened to a remarkable likeness of his grandson's.
▪ The likeness was remarkably good, certainly enough for a quick check at Immigration.
▪ These are likenesses of the man who committed those attacks.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Likeness

Likeness \Like"ness\, n. [AS. gel[=i]cnes.]

  1. The state or quality of being like; similitude; resemblance; similarity; as, the likeness of the one to the other is remarkable.

  2. Appearance or form; guise.

    An enemy in the likeness of a friend.
    --L'Estrange.

  3. That which closely resembles; a portrait.

    [How he looked] the likenesses of him which still remain enable us to imagine.
    --Macaulay.

  4. A comparison; parable; proverb. [Obs.]

    He said to them, Soothly ye shall say to me this likeness, Leech, heal thyself.
    --Wyclif (Luke iv. 23).

    Syn: Similarity; parallel; similitude; representation; portrait; effigy.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
likeness

Old English (Northumbrian) licnes "likeness, similarity; figure, statue, image," shortened from gelicness; see like (adj.) + -ness.

Wiktionary
likeness

n. 1 The state or quality of being like or alike; similitude; resemblance; similarity. 2 Appearance or form; guise. 3 That which closely resembles; a portrait. vb. (context archaic transitive English) To depict.

WordNet
likeness
  1. n. similarity in appearance or character or nature between persons or things; "man created God in his own likeness" [syn: alikeness, similitude] [ant: unlikeness, unlikeness]

  2. picture consisting of a graphic image of a person or thing [syn: semblance]

Wikipedia
Likeness

Likeness may refer to:

  • The Likeness, a 2008 mystery novel by Tana French
  • Image of God
  • Likeness, a short film by Rodrigo Prieto starring Elle Fanning

Usage examples of "likeness".

It is against reason, utterly to deny Likeness by these while admitting it by the greater: tradition at least recognizes certain men of the civic excellence as divine, and we must believe that these too had in some sort attained Likeness: on both levels there is virtue for us, though not the same virtue.

Clamped between his hands, looking up at him with accusing eyes, was the bronze sprayed face of old Absalom Pettigrew, the real inventor of alumite, the substance in which his own likeness had been perpetuated.

A fire sizzled and crackled across the long, low-raftered room of gray stone, where logs of fragrant incense-wood blazed on brazen andirons wrought in the likeness of grinning gargoyles.

Surely this is madness, Atene, for how knowest thou in what likeness thou mightest be sent to tread the earth again?

Likeness, then, attained, perhaps, not by these virtues of the social order but by those greater qualities known by the same general name?

Likeness by these while admitting it by the greater: tradition at least recognizes certain men of the civic excellence as divine, and we must believe that these too had in some sort attained Likeness: on both levels there is virtue for us, though not the same virtue.

Is Likeness, then, attained, perhaps, not by these virtues of the social order but by those greater qualities known by the same general name?

It seemed to him that the power of flight was upon him, and that he flew to that mountain and hung in air beholding it near at hand, and a circle as the appearance of fire round about it, and on the summit of the mountain the likeness of a burg or citadel of brass that was green with eld and surface-battered by the frosts and winds of ages.

That allegory was exactly of the same size as my portrait, and the jeweller who made the locket arranged it in such a manner that no one could suppose the sacred image to be there only for the sake of hiding a profane likeness.

Those pure elements and primitive essences of created nature offered to the first men, still in a close communication with the Deity, not a likeness of resemblance, nor a mere fanciful image or a poetical figure, but a natural and true symbol of Divine power.

But after He had formed this Idea, the particular conception, limited and intelligible, which the Ten Numerations are, of the medium of transmission, Adam Kadmon, the Primal or Supreme Man, He by that medium descended, and may, through that Idea, be called by the name IHUH, and so created things have cognizance of Him, by means of His proper likeness.

In her dark hair was the likeness of the horned moon in honey-coloured cymophanes every stone whereof held a straight beam of light imprisoned that quivered and gleamed as sunbeams quiver wading in the clear deeps of a summer sea.

These people obviously bear some physical similarity to dendroids like the Lusitanii, but there the likeness ends.

In this distress, a bold and dexterous invention assured at once the likeness of the image and the innocence of the worship.

What made me notice her more particularly was that her dress and hat were exactly like those I had given to the Charpillon a few days before, but as I believed the poor wretch to be dead or dying the likeness did not inspire me with any suspicion.