"nugacity" meaning in English

See nugacity in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

Etymology: From Latin nugacitas (“trifling”), from nugax, -acis. Etymology templates: {{der|en|la|nugacitas||trifling}} Latin nugacitas (“trifling”) Head templates: {{en-noun|?}} nugacity
  1. futility; trifling talk or behaviour; drollery
    Sense id: en-nugacity-en-noun-2NZWn7B7 Categories (other): English entries with incorrect language header

Download JSON data for nugacity meaning in English (1.5kB)

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  "etymology_templates": [
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      "args": {
        "1": "en",
        "2": "la",
        "3": "nugacitas",
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        "5": "trifling"
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      "expansion": "Latin nugacitas (“trifling”)",
      "name": "der"
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  "etymology_text": "From Latin nugacitas (“trifling”), from nugax, -acis.",
  "head_templates": [
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      "examples": [
        {
          "ref": "1901, William Lee Howard, The Perverts, page 22",
          "text": "For the first time in his life of twenty-five years, Leigh Newcomber was seriously thinking of personal and practical matters; and this mental state being an untrained one, he jumped from impulse to impulse, and from reason to nugacity; and after a while reason and impulse became so commingled as to leave him in a bewildering maze of mental and moral incertitude.",
          "type": "quotation"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1980, Carl A. Raschke, The Interruption of Eternity: Modern Gnosticism and the Origins of the New Religious Consciousness, page 120",
          "text": "In the poem \"Among School Children\" Yeats gives the nugacity of temporal life a bittersweet rendering.",
          "type": "quotation"
        }
      ],
      "glosses": [
        "futility; trifling talk or behaviour; drollery"
      ],
      "id": "en-nugacity-en-noun-2NZWn7B7",
      "links": [
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        [
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          "drollery"
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  "word": "nugacity"
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{
  "etymology_templates": [
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        "2": "la",
        "3": "nugacitas",
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      "expansion": "Latin nugacitas (“trifling”)",
      "name": "der"
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  "etymology_text": "From Latin nugacitas (“trifling”), from nugax, -acis.",
  "head_templates": [
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        "English terms with quotations",
        "Quotation templates to be cleaned"
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      "examples": [
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          "ref": "1901, William Lee Howard, The Perverts, page 22",
          "text": "For the first time in his life of twenty-five years, Leigh Newcomber was seriously thinking of personal and practical matters; and this mental state being an untrained one, he jumped from impulse to impulse, and from reason to nugacity; and after a while reason and impulse became so commingled as to leave him in a bewildering maze of mental and moral incertitude.",
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-06-23 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-06-20 using wiktextract (1b9bfc5 and 0136956). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.