wildness in English

noun

[wild·ness || 'waɪldnɪs]

condition of being wild; state of being undomesticated; state of being uncultivated

Use "wildness" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "wildness" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "wildness", or refer to the context using the word "wildness" in the English Dictionary.

1. Studied the tissue cultures and rapid propagation of Lishui wildness Bletilla striate.

2. There is neither a tree nor a wild flower in this wildness.

3. Nature and wildness have been important subjects in various eras of world history.

4. The emptiness, the bleakness, the purity and wildness of that endless landscape was Breathtakingly beautiful

5. 25 Primitiveness is of esthetics, while wildness represents the most bewitching element in Indian furniture.

6. Gunner is the Affably swaggering incarnation of wildness, defined by tame early 50s Midwestern standards.

7. 20 Or it may be that these animals somehow embody that peculiar quality of untamed wildness that readers admire and appreciate.

8. Antonyms for Abstemiousness include self-indulgence, excess, drunkenness, intemperance, dissipation, gluttony, incontinence, indulgence, wildness and insobriety

9. Mosco, Maisie OUT OF THE ASHES (2002) She sees faces she loves bending to her, smiling, Chiding her wildness. …

10. 24 But, instead, he drew back, repelled and almost frightened by the flooding, uncontrolled wildness of the emotion.

11. 15 Or it may be that these animals somehow embody that peculiar quality of untamed wildness that readers admire and appreciate.

12. Bravado ultimately traces to the Old Italian adjective bravo, meaning "courageous" or "wild." Nowadays, the wildness once associated with Bravado has been tamed to an overbearing boldness that comes …

13. Charles Darwin described hybrids of game birds and domestic fowl in The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication: Mr. Hewitt, who has had great experience in crossing tame cock-pheasants with fowls belonging to five breeds, gives as the character of all 'extraordinary wildness' (13/42.

14. This approach permits us to conceptualize as well as Contextualize the knowledge of nursing the story tells.: Another way to Contextualize the hybrid in Hume's poetry is to think of a wildness offsetting the presumed, or the unknown interfusing the known.

15. It was a reminder of the Abjectness of her position she covered her face with her hands, having been reminded of the Abjectness of her position in being so much Hugh's mistress and so little his equal and friend the elephant's still-magnificent wildness serves only to highlight the Abjectness of its decline