conceitedness

NOUN
  1. the trait of being unduly vain and conceited; false pride
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How To Use conceitedness In A Sentence

  • ‘His conceitedness actually does have some foundation,’ Vasquez noted.
  • But this and his conceitedness were two of the things that had made him seem cute when I was a sophomore.
  • He'd love to write a collection of essays on speculative fiction and, in a fit of frenzied conceitedness, his long-suffering epic fantasy sequence about a wizard who tattooed souls. MIND MELD: Guide to International SF/F Part IV
  • “Conversation should be pleasant without scurrility, witty without affectation, free without indecency, learned without conceitedness, novel without falsehood.” How to Write Conversationally | Write to Done
  • Traits with the opposite implications are assessed as the most undesirable (e.g., conceitedness, selfishness, insecurity, aggressiveness, shyness).
  • Their preference to be alone can come across as arrogance or conceitedness, but these qualities aren’t applicable. Writer's Block: Year of the Ox
  • His fellow winners—there were originally ten—likewise were always grotesque parodies of childish vices such as greed, selfishness, conceitedness, television addiction, or being spoiled. Storyteller
  • Yeah yeah either this is conceitedness or this is optimistic. April 14
  • Apple is the Micorosft of the 2000s only there's still this air of conceitedness and snobbery that hasn't dulled despite the increase in perception of Apple's as common. Bad Apple: An Argument Against Buying An iPhone | Lifehacker Australia
  • “Dear Diary, the top three least attractive qualities in a man are: patronizing me, the use of intimidation tactics, and conceitedness.” Fatal Circle
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