dinginess
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]dinginess (usually uncountable, plural dinginesses)
- The state or quality of being dingy.
- 1842 December – 1844 July, Charles Dickens, chapter 4, in The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit, London: Chapman and Hall, […], published 1844, →OCLC, page 34:
- His nether garments were of a blueish gray—violent in its colours once, but sobered now by age and dinginess—and were so stretched and strained in a tough conflict between his braces and his straps, that they appeared every moment in danger of flying asunder at the knees.
- 1871 March–April, Henry James, Jr., “A Passionate Pilgrim”, in A Passionate Pilgrim, and Other Tales, Boston, Mass.: James R[ipley] Osgood and Company, […], published 31 January 1875, →OCLC, chapter 2, page 110:
- He was a pitiful image of shabby gentility and the dinginess of “reduced circumstances.”
- 1918, Booth Tarkington, chapter 31, in The Magnificent Ambersons[1], Garden City: Doubleday, Page & Co., page 437:
- The streets were thunderous; a vast energy heaved under the universal coating of dinginess.
- 1944 November and December, Talisman, “A Broadening Horizon”, in Railway Magazine, page 340:
- The cramped dinginess of such important stations as Grantham and Peterborough has to be experienced to be believed.