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Rawness   /rˈɔnɪs/   Listen
Rawness

noun
1.
A chilly dampness.
2.
The state of being crude and incomplete and imperfect.  Synonym: incompleteness.  "The rawness of his diary made it unpublishable"  Antonym: completeness.
3.
A pain that is felt (as when the area is touched).  Synonyms: soreness, tenderness.  "After taking a cold, rawness of the larynx and trachea come on"
4.
Lack of experience and the knowledge and understanding derived from experience.  Synonym: inexperience.  "Their poor behavior was due to the rawness of the troops"  Antonym: experience.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Rawness" Quotes from Famous Books



... end that penetrating rawness had been abroad, which precedes and accompanies a thaw; and one day, early in February, when, after the unequalled severity of the winter, the air seemed of an incredible mildness, the thaw was there in earnest; on the ice of more than three months' standing, pools of water had formed ...
— Maurice Guest • Henry Handel Richardson

... whose conversation was agreeable and engaging I listened and attended to the turn of it. I addressed myself, though de tres mauvaise grace [with a very bad grace], to all the most fashionable fine ladies; confessed and laughed with them at my own awkwardness and rawness, recommending myself as an object for them to ...
— How To Behave: A Pocket Manual Of Republican Etiquette, And Guide To Correct Personal Habits • Samuel R Wells

... a blue, light-breathing sky. At one point the river pierced the blackness of the wood, and in the space thus made the spire of a noble church shot heavenward. Swans floated dimly along the stream and under the bridge. The air was fresh, but the rawness of spring was gone. It was the last week of May; the "high midsummer pomps" were near—a heavenly prophecy in wood ...
— Sir George Tressady, Vol. I • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... ragged sleeves, and held up her scrawny arms and thin hands, chapped almost to rawness. They were black with bruises. The manse children shivered. Faith flushed crimson with indignation. Una's ...
— Rainbow Valley • Lucy Maud Montgomery

... I'll go to Anita." Natural feminine tact would have saved her from this rawness; but, convinced that she was a "great lady" by the flattery of servants and shopkeepers and sensational newspapers and social climbers, she had discarded tact as worthy only of the lowly and of the aspiring before ...
— The Deluge • David Graham Phillips


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