spissitude

noun

Etymology

From Middle English spissitude, from Old French spissitude and Latin spissitūdō, from spissus (“thick”).

  1. derived from spissitūdō
  2. derived from spissitude
  3. inherited from spissitude

Definitions

  1. Density, thickness

    Density, thickness; the state or quality of being inspissated or thickened.

    • The cause is, for that it is over-moistened, and wanteth spissitude: and we have a merry saying, that they that go drunk to bed get daughters.
    • When the juice of the poppy has been properly dried, that is rapidly, in a cool shade, and protected from dust, it possesses, at the spissitude of 70 per cent. (this is 30 of water) the following properties:...
  2. Spiritual substance or density, viewed as the fourth dimension of an object.

    • Bodies in and of themselves lack spissitude. But since, in nature, all bodies are permeated by spirit of some kind, the ability of a complex body to maintain its size indicates a certain, constant spissitude.
    • The first concerns the peculiar attribute of spirit, its spissitude or spiritual density that fourth dimension which augments or diminishes as the spirit contracts or expands.
    • When the soul, for example, is contracted principally in the fourth ventricle, the space occupied possesses not only the three normal dimensions, but also this fourth dimension or spissitude.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for spissitude. 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