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infiniteness

NOUN
  1. the quality of being infinite; without bound or limit

How To Use infiniteness In A Sentence

  • When the western frontier's apparent boundlessness was revealed as only ostensible - when lines were measured and laid down across it, disproving its infiniteness - this escape route was cut off.
  • Some philosophers believe there is only one thing unending beyond death and the inconceivable infiniteness of the universe.
  • In that time it has altered the knowledge and theories scientists have held about the universe and its infiniteness. The Magnificence of the Hubble Telescope Space Mission - David Houle - MediaBizBlogger
  • However, Galileo avoided open speculation about its possible infiniteness, as that question had been used to persecute Giordano Bruno.
  • We're addicted to the unscripted infiniteness of it all, every game a potential eternity (remember extra innings at Candlestick?) S Over
  • It seems clear that within the microcosm of the mind and the infiniteness of space, human curiosity is never-ending. Jon Chattman: On the Rise: "Deep" Thoughts With Joan as Police Woman
  • _Thirdly_, If God hath forgiven me so many grievous offences, if he hath pardoned so heinous and innumerable injuries, that amount to a kind of infiniteness in number and quality, O how much more am I bound to forgive my brethren a few light and trivial offences? The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning
  • He once said that the vanity of existence is revealed in the form that existence assumes: in the infiniteness of time and space contrasted with the finiteness of the individual in both; in the fleeting present as the sole form in which actuality exists; in the contingency and relativity of all things; in continual becoming without being; in continual desire without satisfaction; in the continual frustration of striving of which life consists. Chuck Klosterman on Living and Society
  • There are many sins, little ones, that in our practice pass for venal and uncontrolled; but look on the filthy loathsome nature of all sin, and hate the least offence, for it hath a kind of infiniteness in it, and blotteth the soul, defileth the person. The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning
  • I shall, in the next place, speak of those which relate to the manner of his being, immensity and eternity; that is, the infiniteness of his essence, both in respect of space and duration; that the Divine nature hath no limits of its being, nor bounds of its duration. The Works of Dr. John Tillotson, Late Archbishop of Canterbury. Vol. 07.
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