Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The quality of being surd, in any sense; deafness; nonvocality.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun obsolete Deafness.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun obsolete
deafness
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Should only then every stronger and livelier emotion be termed enthusiasm and ab« surdity? —
Sermons on Prevalent Errors, and Vices and on Various Other Topics Georg Joachim Zollikofer 1812
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There is cod - surdity, and met with no success, siderable merit in this play.
Biographia dramatica, or, A companion to the playhouse: 1782
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This piece, written by the author of Hurhthrumlo,. wqs, like that, full of madness and ab - surdity, yet, like that, had in i | many strokes of wonderful ima -. nation.
Biographia dramatica, or, A companion to the playhouse: 1782
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His aunt’s voice came loudly from the garden room, surdity now having apparently been loaded upon old Mrs. Houlihan’s other misfortunes.
At Swim, Two Boys Jamie O’Neill 2002
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His aunt’s voice came loudly from the garden room, surdity now having apparently been loaded upon old Mrs. Houlihan’s other misfortunes.
At Swim, Two Boys Jamie O’Neill 2002
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Any demand for equality which goes beyond that, of necessity passes into ab - surdity” (Anti-Dühring, in Abernethy, pp. 199-200).
EQUALITY R. R. PALMER 1968
Gammerstang commented on the word surdity
(noun) - (1) Deafness; adaptation of Latin surditas . . . from surdus, in an active sense, deaf; in a passive sense, silent, mute, dumb, dull, indistinct.
--Sir James Murray's New English Dictionary, 1919
(2) The term surdism is applied to those degrees of deafness which make the acquisition of speech in the very young impossible by ordinary means.
--D. Williams' Medical Discoveries of Infancy, 1898
January 26, 2018