Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The quality or state of being concrete, in any sense.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun The quality of being concrete.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun uncountable the state of being
concrete - noun countable the result of being
concrete
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun the quality of being concrete (not abstract)
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
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Examples
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"And we didn't see that kind of concreteness from President Obama."
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The media attach an unwarranted "concreteness" to sample estimates out of proportion to their real status, probably out of sheer ignorance.
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Notice how the second sentence has to bring some kind of concreteness to the initially vague and intuitively silly opening statement.
Strange Affinities: A Partial Return to Wordsworthian Poetics After Modernism 2003
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"fine white thread running, through years and years," and Hans flirts with the possibility that language may not precisely describe the world ( "I was assaulted by the notion, arriving in the form of a terrifying stroke of consciousness, that substance-everything of so called concreteness-was indistinct from its unnameable opposite").
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It has a kind of concreteness to is that a Latin language doesn't have.
OpEdNews 2010
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Sydney Chaffee continued, "I've gotten closer to achieving a balance between two extremes in my own intentions -- the extreme concreteness of many 9th graders' first intentions and the extreme flimsiness of the overly poetic, grand intentions of my first few years which were hard for me to know if I was actually doing."
Meg Campbell: What's Your Intention This School Year? Meg Campbell 2011
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Sydney Chaffee continued, "I've gotten closer to achieving a balance between two extremes in my own intentions -- the extreme concreteness of many 9th graders' first intentions and the extreme flimsiness of the overly poetic, grand intentions of my first few years which were hard for me to know if I was actually doing."
Meg Campbell: What's Your Intention This School Year? Meg Campbell 2011
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Sydney Chaffee continued, "I've gotten closer to achieving a balance between two extremes in my own intentions -- the extreme concreteness of many 9th graders' first intentions and the extreme flimsiness of the overly poetic, grand intentions of my first few years which were hard for me to know if I was actually doing."
Meg Campbell: What's Your Intention This School Year? Meg Campbell 2011
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The cosmic symbol of the rising sun expresses the universality of God above all particular places and yet maintains the concreteness of divine revelation.
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Sydney Chaffee continued, "I've gotten closer to achieving a balance between two extremes in my own intentions -- the extreme concreteness of many 9th graders' first intentions and the extreme flimsiness of the overly poetic, grand intentions of my first few years which were hard for me to know if I was actually doing."
Meg Campbell: What's Your Intention This School Year? Meg Campbell 2011
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