feelness

noun

Etymology

From feel + -ness, or perhaps continuing Middle English fēlnes (“perception”), from Old English ġefēlnes (“sensitivity; feeling”).

  1. inherited from ġefēlnes
  2. inherited from felnes

Definitions

  1. The state, condition, or quality of feeling

    The state, condition, or quality of feeling; perception; sensitivity

    • You know that much and you also feel the feelness of your own hand. Now that's hard to say any other way. You know what you feel and you know that it's you feelin' inside your own hand and arm.
    • Within the group of low involvement "feel" products the following 10 were retained (in descending order of "feelness"): birthday cards, indoor plants, liquor, sun-glasses, pilsner beer, pralines, port, potato crisps, cookies, chocolate.
    • Took reality further, beyond the realness, feelness of things.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for feelness. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA