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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Stagnancy

Stagnancy \Stag"nan*cy\ (st[a^]g"nan*s[y^]), n. State of being stagnant.

Wiktionary
stagnancy

n. The property of being stagnant.

WordNet
stagnancy
  1. n. inactivity of liquids; being stagnant; standing still; without current or circulation [syn: stagnation]

  2. a state of inactivity (in business or art etc); "economic growth of less than 1% per year is considered to be economic stagnation" [syn: stagnation, doldrums]

Usage examples of "stagnancy".

She had been appalled by the corruption and stagnancy of the old Church, yet in reforming it she had killed tens of thousands and reached an empty end.

A tropical swamp and jungle was also an invitation to stagnancy for Terrans, and on a much more primitive scale.

When they had it all, they realized that the end of it was stagnancy, which common sense will tell you is the ultimate result of any material utopia.

Saved as he was by his temperament alike from deep suffering and tense emotion, and from any vital mingling either with the scum and foam or with the stagnancy and mire of life, the books remain as a brilliant illusion, with much of the shifting hues and changing glimmer of his own ardent and restless mind rippling over the surface of a depth which is always a little mysterious as to the secrets it actually holds.

Otherwise you would be sticking either at a stagnancy or at something impossible.

Both would be unwise: nature tolerates no stagnancy and punishes experiments with the impossible.

They, of course, had not yet arrived at the idea that God is a personal Spirit whose nature is revealed in the constitutive characteristics of the human soul, and who carries on his works from eternity to eternity without monotonous repetition or wearisome stagnancy, but with perpetual variety in never ceasingmotion.

You, McCulloch, upset over the stagnancy of one society and remorseful in the extreme over the deaths of innocents you were forced to carry out.

So there, where the shadow lay thickest under the arch, was a patch of still black water, confined in stagnancy by a sunk log on which alluvial mud had made a garden of whitish grasses like the beard of an unclean old man.

With a twingeing hope that it would not be so, she watched the silver birch branch hesitate, yield to the under-ebb, and lie at last helpless on the black stagnancy, which continued to vibrate with an air of malice.

Against her faith, Sachsa can see the shallows of his own life, the bathtub stagnancy of those soirees where for years not even the faces changed .

For it is then as if our tears broke through an inveterate inner dam, and let all sorts of ancient peccancies and moral stagnancies drain away, leaving us now washed and soft of heart and open to every nobler leading.