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Smoothness   /smˈuðnəs/   Listen
Smoothness

noun
1.
A texture without roughness; smooth to the touch.  "Some artists prefer the smoothness of a board"
2.
Powerful and effective language.  Synonyms: eloquence, fluency.  "Fluency in spoken and written English is essential" , "His oily smoothness concealed his guilt from the police"
3.
The quality of being bland and gracious or ingratiating in manner.  Synonyms: blandness, suaveness, suavity.
4.
The quality of having a level and even surface.  "The weather system of the Pacific is determined by the uninterrupted smoothness of the ocean"
5.
The quality of being free from errors or interruptions.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Smoothness" Quotes from Famous Books



... and thenceforward, for more than a month, extends the reign of this our woodland queen. I know not why one should sigh after the blossoming gorges of the Himalaya, when our forests are all so crowded with this glowing magnificence,—rounding the tangled swamps into smoothness, lighting up the underwoods, overtopping the pastures, lining the rural lanes, and rearing its great pinkish masses till they meet overhead. The color ranges from the purest white to a perfect rose-pink, and there is an inexhaustible vegetable vigor about the whole thing, which puts to shame ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 10, No. 62, December, 1862 • Various

... judicious, not to the crowd, whose opinion is worthless. He is to observe, like the author of Aeneas' speech, the 'modesty' of nature. He must not tear a 'passion' to tatters, to split the ears of the incompetent, but in the very tempest of passion is to keep a temperance and smoothness. The million, we gather from the first passage, cares nothing for construction; and so, we learn in the second passage, the barren spectators want to laugh at the clown instead of attending to some necessary question of the play. Hamlet's hatred of exaggeration is marked ...
— Shakespearean Tragedy - Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth • A. C. Bradley

... and steadiness of this threatening gesture in so public a thoroughfare attracted my attention; and next, the more remarkable circumstance that nobody heeded it. Both men threaded their way among the other passengers with a smoothness hardly consistent even with the action of walking on a pavement; and no single creature, that I could see, gave them place, touched them, or looked after them. In passing before my windows, they both stared up at me. I saw their two faces very distinctly, and I knew that I could ...
— The Signal-Man #33 • Charles Dickens

... wax-like smoothness, and, to a certain extent, the whiteness of her complexion, had yielded to the fervid rays of the prairie sun; but the slight embrowning appeared rather an improvement: as the bloom upon the peach, or the russet on the nectarine, proves the superior ...
— The Wild Huntress - Love in the Wilderness • Mayne Reid

... speak our own tongue, that I cannot pronounce Greek with sufficient exactness; for our nation does not encourage those that learn the languages of many nations, and so adorn their discourses with the smoothness of their periods; because they look upon this sort of accomplishment as common, not only to all sorts of free-men, but to as many of the servants as please to learn them. But they give him the testimony of being a wise man who is fully ...
— The Antiquities of the Jews • Flavius Josephus


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