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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
enormity
noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ In his interview, he discussed the enormity of the agency's task.
▪ The enormity of our country's economic problems is overwhelming.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But how could the children understand the enormity of the killing if they were not punished?
▪ Even the most intrepid social workers were aghast at the enormity of it all.
▪ I lay for a while simply wrestling with the enormity of it.
▪ Incomprehensible, the enormity of it all.
▪ Sometimes, the enormity of it is overwhelming.
▪ The enormity of what she had seen was now topped by the further enormity of involving the police.
▪ The Toscanini presentation was breathtaking, if for no other reason than its enormity.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Enormity

Enormity \E*nor"mi*ty\, n.; pl. Enormities. [L. enormitas, fr. enormis enormous: cf. F. ['e]normit['e]. See Enormous.]

  1. The state or quality of exceeding a measure or rule, or of being immoderate, monstrous, or outrageous.

    The enormity of his learned acquisitions.
    --De Quincey.

  2. That which is enormous; especially, an exceeding offense against order, right, or decency; an atrocious crime; flagitious villainy; an atrocity.

    These clamorous enormities which are grown too big and strong for law or shame.
    --South.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
enormity

late 15c., "transgression, crime; irregularity," from Old French enormité "extravagance, atrocity, heinous sin," from Latin enormitatem (nominative enormitas) "hugeness, vastness; irregularity," from enormis "irregular, huge" (see enormous). Meaning "extreme wickedness" in English attested from 1560s. The notion is of that which surpasses the endurable limits of order, right, decency. Sense of "hugeness" (1765 in English) is etymological but to prevent misunderstanding probably best avoided in favor of enormousness, though this, too, originally meant "immeasurable wickedness" (1718) and didn't start to mean "hugeness" until c.1800.

Wiktionary
enormity

n. 1 (context uncountable English) Extreme wickedness, nefariousness. (from 15th c.) 2 (context countable English) An act of extreme evil or wickedness. (from 15th c.) 3 (context uncountable English) Hugeness, enormousness, immenseness. (from 18th c.)

WordNet
enormity
  1. n. the quality of being outrageous [syn: outrageousness]

  2. vastness of size or extent; "in careful usage the noun enormity is not used to express the idea of great size"; "universities recognized the enormity of their task"

  3. the quality of extreme wickedness

  4. an act of extreme wickedness

Usage examples of "enormity".

Hence, while he has endeavored truly to depict--or to let those who made history at the time help him to depict--the enormity of the offence of the armed Rebellion and of the heresies and plottings of certain Southern leaders precipitating it, yet not one word will be found, herein, condemnatory of those who, with manly candor, soldierly courage, and true patriotism, acknowledged that error when the ultimate arbitrament of the sword had decided against them.

He found it difficult to absorb the enormity of it, that he walked with Lord Corbal Xir, one of the most feared men in settled space.

I must be allowed to say that Judge Douglas recurs again, as he did upon one or two other occasions, to the enormity of Lincoln, an insignificant individual like Lincoln,--upon his ipse dixit charging a conspiracy upon a large number of members of Congress, the Supreme Court, and two Presidents, to nationalize slavery.

I must again be permitted to remind him that although my ipse dixit may not be as great as his, yet it somewhat reduces the force of his calling my attention to the enormity of my making a like charge against him.

To convict me of my crime she shewed me twenty-five cards, placed in order, and on them she displayed the various enormities of which I had been guilty.

The Treacy sisters stood on top of the Cliffs of Moher, taking in the enormity of the vista before them: a haze of misty-whites, abstract purples and blue vapours that had once been sea and land.

Gavlok and the squires sat in silence, stupefied by the enormity of the disaster, the Mountain Swordsman Radd Falcontop spoke up.

The sails, but vaguely discernible behind the forecastle deck and above the bowsprit, swollen by the raging force of the storm, were bearing back in their enormity, in order to, having gained the crest, righten themselves and then, tilting over the void, speed the vessel on towards new billows.

She left, thinking oddly of the enormity of his hand, and started to make a beeline for the War Department across the street.

I conceive, often misapplied, and indeed, when I consider the vices, cruelties, and enormities of every kind that spring up in the tainted atmosphere of a feverish civilization, I am inclined to think that so far as the relative wickedness of the parties is concerned, four or five Marquesan Islanders sent to the United States as Missionaries might be quite as useful as an equal number of Americans despatched to the Islands in a similar capacity.

At this the natives ran scampering through the groves, horror-struck at the enormity of the act.

For the first time he completely understood the enormity of what he had launched them into: the outside, the barbarian world, away from everything civilized, leaving everything worthwhile behind, sonno-joi and Choshu and shishi and family, leaving no wife and sons--ah my brave and so wonderful Sumomo how you are missed, you would have made my leaving easier but now .

Surveying all his fragmentary and hitherto undigested, uncriticized acquaintance with the world of men, he saw that even if he had been clearly conscious of the enormity of slaughter, yet to stand aside would have been wrong.

They have robbed us of our property, they have murdered our citizens while endeavoring to reclaim that property by lawful means, they have set at naught the decrees of the Supreme Court, they have invaded our States and killed our citizens, they have declared their unalterable determination to exclude us altogether from the Territories, they have nullified the laws of Congress, and finally they have capped the mighty pyramid of unfraternal enormities by electing Abraham Lincoln to the Chief Magistracy, on a platform and by a system which indicated nothing but the subjugation of the South and the complete ruin of her social, political and industrial institutions.

He understood the enormity the minute the delivery man arrived at the flat with four unliftable cases.