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Webster 1913 Edition


Bigness

Big′ness

,
Noun.
The state or quality of being big; largeness; size; bulk.

Webster 1828 Edition


Bigness

BIG'NESS

,
Noun.
Bulk; size; largeness; dimensions. It is used of any object,animate or inanimate, and with or without comparison. Thus we speak of the bigness of a tree, of a rock, of a house, without instituting a comparison with other objects of the kind. Yet in this case there is always some reference in the mind to known measure. We also say, one thing is as big as another; in which case we give the idea of unknown size, by a known object. Big and bigness always imply expansion, more or less, in breadth, and are thus distinguished from tall and tallness.

Definition 2024


bigness

bigness

English

Noun

bigness (countable and uncountable, plural bignesses)

  1. The characteristic of being big.
    • 1922, Sinclair Lewis, Babbitt, Chapter 3,
      It was big—and Babbitt respected bigness in anything; in mountains, jewels, muscles, wealth, or words.
    • 1944, Emily Carr, The House of Small, "Art and the House,"
      They liked what they liked—would tolerate no innovations. My change in thought and expression had angered them into fierce denouncement. To expose a thing deeper than its skin surface was to them an indecency. They ridiculed my striving for bigness, depth.
  2. (obsolete) Size.
    • 1594, Christopher Marlowe, Edward II, Act II, Scene 1,
      Mine old lord, whiles he liv'd, was so precise,
      That he would take exceptions at my buttons,
      And, being like pins' heads, blame me for the bigness;
      Which made me curate-like in mine attire,
    • 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book II, lines 1051-3,
      And, fast by, hanging in a golden chain,
      This pendent World, in bigness as a star
      Of smallest magnitude close by the moon.
    • 1704, Isaac Newton, Opticks, London: William Innys, 1730, Book 3, Part I, p. 346,
      Do not several sorts of Rays make Vibrations of several bignesses, which according to their bignesses excite Sensations of several Colours, much after the manner that the Vibrations of the Air, according to their several bignesses excite Sensations of several Sounds?
    • 1726, Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels, Part I, Chapter VI,
      [] the tallest horses and oxen are between four and five inches in height, the sheep an inch and half, more or less: their geese about the bigness of a sparrow, and so the several gradations downwards till you come to the smallest, which to my sight, were almost invisible []
    • 1918, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Gods of Mars, HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2008:
      Among the ornaments … was a small mirror, about the bigness of a lady's hand glass, …