different between supervacaneous vs supervacaneousness

supervacaneous

English

Etymology

From Latin supervac?neus; compare Italian supervacaneo, Portuguese supervacâneo, Spanish supervacáneo.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) enPR: so?o'p?rv?k??n??s, syo?o'p?rv?k??n??s, IPA(key): /?su?p?v??ke?n??s/, /?sju?p?v??ke?n??s/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?su?p??v??ke?n??s/

Adjective

supervacaneous (not comparable)

  1. (now rare) Added above what is needed or necessary; superfluous, redundant.
    • 1915, George Wharton James, Our American Woodlands:
      It is an awful thing to find your efforts supervacaneous when you are so far away from home and friends, sympathy, and help.
    • 1960, Nancy Mitford, Don't Tell Alfred:
      ‘It became all the more important for me to get out because my son Foster, aged now fifteen, is only ten points below genius and this genius would have been unavailing and supervacaneous, in other words wasted, behind the iron curtain.’
    • 1972, Aiko It? and Graeme Wilson, translating Natsume S?seki, I Am a Cat (2002 combined edition, Tuttle Publishing, ?ISBN, volume one, chapter III, page 152:
      If I were simply to discuss noses in disregard of their relation to other entities, then I would declare without fear of contradiction that the nose of Mrs. Goldfield is superb, superlative, and, though possibly supervacaneous, one well-placed to win first prize at any exhibition of nasal development which might be organized by the long-nosed goblins on Mount Kurama.

Synonyms

  • pleonastic, redundant, superfluous, supervacaneal (obsolete), supervacuous (obsolete)

Derived terms

  • supervacaneously, supervacaneousness

Translations

References

  • supervacaneous, a.” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd ed., 1989]

supervacaneous From the web:



supervacaneousness

English

Etymology

supervacaneous +? -ness.

Noun

supervacaneousness (uncountable)

  1. The state or quality of being supervacaneous.
    • 1914, The Alumni Association, Fortnightly Notes, Volume 2, Issue 3, page 30,
      The only excuse for fetching a sigh now is that the program was too long (four hours), and that a supervacaneousness of the wildfire kind of piano playing was at times felt.

supervacaneousness From the web:

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