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Vividness   /vˈɪvədnəs/   Listen
Vividness

noun
1.
Interest and variety and intensity.  Synonyms: color, colour.  "The characters were delineated with exceptional vividness"
2.
Chromatic purity: freedom from dilution with white and hence vivid in hue.  Synonyms: chroma, intensity, saturation.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Vividness" Quotes from Famous Books



... before the rain-storm began, we were treated to wonderful cloud and light effects. The lower portion of the sky, of brilliant yellow and vivid green, was surmounted by golden and red streaks of wonderful vividness. Later, over the great natural gateways, the sky formed itself into concentric arches of blazing yellow and red, rendered intensely luminous by contrast with the heavy black clouds which were fast collecting overhead. No sooner ...
— Across Unknown South America • Arnold Henry Savage Landor

... time when the soul first realizes itself as a personality with definite responsibilities and relations. This experience comes to some earlier, and to some with greater vividness, than to others. So long as we are blind to our powers, responsibilities, relations, we can hardly be said to be spiritually awake. He only is awake who knows himself as a personality; who has heard the voice of ...
— The Ascent of the Soul • Amory H. Bradford

... inward soul-state or of outward fortune. The theory of the peripety, in short, practically resolves itself for us into the theory of the "great scene," Plays there are, many and excellent plays, in which some one scene stands out from all the rest, impressing itself with peculiar vividness on the spectator's mind; and, nine times out of ten, this scene will be found to involve a peripety. It can do no harm, then, if the playwright should ask himself: "Can I, without any undue sacrifice, so develop my theme as to entail upon ...
— Play-Making - A Manual of Craftsmanship • William Archer

... a policy so suicidal as to favor the belief that they had been placed there in the providence of God to warn the world against Babylon. At the same time the history of the Papal Court reveals with peculiar vividness the contradictions of Renaissance morality and manners. We find in the Popes of this period what has been already noticed in the despots—learning, the patronage of of the arts, the passion for magnificence, and the refinements of polite culture, alternating and not unfrequently combined with barbarous ...
— Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) • John Addington Symonds

... collection alone, then, renders it of great importance; but its value is immeasurably enhanced by two circumstances,—the first, that every drawing was made while the fish retained all that vividness of colouring which becomes lost so soon after its removal from its native element; second, that when the sketch was finished its subject was carefully labelled, preserved in spirits, and forwarded to England, so that at the present moment the original of every ...
— Ceylon; an Account of the Island Physical, Historical, and • James Emerson Tennent


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