obtundity
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]obtundity (usually uncountable, plural obtundities)
- (rare, often medicine) The state or characteristic of having dulled senses or limited awareness.
- 1824, Theophrastus (author), Francis Howell (translator), The Characters of Theophrastus, Josiah Taylor (London), p. 237 (Google preview):
- [T]here are beings [who] . . . revel, with a lively zest, among all the things that are most foul and loathsome. . . . Sensuality, force of temper, inertness, obtundity of perception, personal idolatry, and the destitution of the higher and better emotions of humanity, are the ingredients of a constitution of this order.
- 2014, David J. Magee, Orthopedic Physical Assessment, →ISBN, page 104:
- The patient goes through the following stages of recovery: unconsciousness (also called paralytic coma), stupor, obtundity, lethargy, confusion (with or without delirium), near lucidity with automatism, and finally full alertness.
- 2024 January 17, Andrew Barton, “'Obtundity' signs bewilder York residents and visitors”, in BBC News[1]:
- Collins English Dictionary defines obtundity as the state of "having the senses numbed or less sharp."
- 1824, Theophrastus (author), Francis Howell (translator), The Characters of Theophrastus, Josiah Taylor (London), p. 237 (Google preview):
Further reading
[edit]- “obtundity”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.