Crossword clues for massiveness
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Massiveness \Mass"ive*ness\, n. The state or quality of being massive; massiness.
Wiktionary
n. The property of being massive.
WordNet
n. an unwieldy largeness [syn: bulkiness]
the property of being large in mass [syn: heft, heftiness, ponderousness, ponderosity]
Usage examples of "massiveness".
She looked at the subdolous, pale-green eyes, with their predatory restlessness, at the square-blocked, flaccid jaw, and the beefy, animal-like massiveness of the strong neck, at the huge form odorous of gin and cigar smoke, and the great, hairy hands marked with their purplish veinings.
Aside from unmissable massiveness, the man was toothy and blond and unsmiling.
Her height, her massiveness, were amplified by the proximity of the dolls and the slender figure of the girl.
A ship drawn into a giant collapsar would be annihilated, plummeting to the center, in a matter of days or hours, depending on the massiveness of the trap.
There is a clearness of atmosphere, a strength of _chiaro oscuro_, a massiveness in the foliage, and a brilliance of contrast, that must make a colourist of any one who has an eye.
Her feet had turned to huge, yellow-gray talons, arthritically gnarled by their own massiveness.
It is vast, having that aspect of massiveness which characterizes Mongol building, my measurement of its breadth being 529 feet, and it rises in six terraces, each divided up into innumerable niches, containing each a statue of the seated Boodh, with a voluptuousness of tracery that is drunkening, all surmounted by a crowd of cupolas, and crowned by a great dagop: and when I saw this, I had a longing to be back at my home after so prolonged roaming, and to set up the temple of temples.
He rose on his toes, convulsing as his body reacted to the massiveness of the injury.
The peaks, tors, and logging-stones of Bijanugger and Annegundi indent the horizon in picturesque confusion, and are scarcely to be distinguished from the more artificial ruins of the ancient metropolis of the Deccan, which are usually constructed with blocks quarried from their sides, and vie in grotesqueness of outline and massiveness of character with the alternate airiness and solidity exhibited by nature in the nicely-poised logging stones and columnar piles, and in the walls of prodigious cuboidal blocks of granite which often crest and top her massive domes and ridges in natural cyclopean masonry.
A brick wall loomed to their right: a blast wall, judging by its massiveness.