flabbiness

[ UK /flˈæbɪnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a flabby softness
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How To Use flabbiness In A Sentence

  • He looks broader than ever but these days it looks less like flabbiness and more like someone who works out, which is more in keeping with the character.
  • His great face was yellow and seemed in that moment of a preternatural flabbiness; his beady eyes were beadier than ever. Captain Blood
  • The clarity of his writing makes it easy to see the flabbiness of his arguments, but he's far from the worst offender. Ayn Rand, Wise Philosopher Despite Some Bad Arguments, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Its flabbiness strongly suggested that Charles indulged a little too heavily in the good life.
  • When you are a child, others will show pity to your flabbiness, but when you are gown up, you don't have the right to be flabbiness anymore, you must live as the strongest man in the world.
  • Some readers may feel a prickling of unease at the possibility that the pleasant laxity of modern mores—in language, dress and eating habits—might contribute to a flabbiness of will on bigger matters. The Will in the World
  • He wasn't lean, like her brothers, but he didn't have the flabbiness that so many nobles have from a lifetime of good food.
  • We may thrill with dread at the aggressive hyphenate, but this tame flabbiness is accepted as Americanization. Trans-national America
  • The signs of a hot dyscrasia are heat, burning and pain in the wound; of a cold dyscrasia, lividity of the wound; the moist dyscrasia occasions flabbiness (_mollicies_) and profuse suppuration, and the dry produces dryness and induration. Gilbertus Anglicus Medicine of the Thirteenth Century
  • He did not know that what he called her flabbiness was the inertia in which they stored their strength, nor that in them there remained a vigilant and indestructible soul, biding its time, holding its own against maternity, making more and more for self-protection, for assertion, for supremacy. The Combined Maze
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