[
US
/ɫuˈsɪdɪti/
]
[ UK /luːsˈɪdɪti/ ]
[ UK /luːsˈɪdɪti/ ]
NOUN
- free from obscurity and easy to understand; the comprehensibility of clear expression
- a lucid state of mind; not confused
How To Use lucidity In A Sentence
- Now in a rapid descent, Broder's shuffle become more of a mad dash to avoid the fallout of his next instance of lack of lucidity by asserting that Ned Lamont supporters are "vituperative", bloggers of the left are all "angry", and Republican Senator Mike DeWine of Ohio, and Bush sycophant fame, is an "ally of the center". Broder Bashes Bloggers While Doing the "Bush Bash"!
- And how about McCain's daily struggle with "lucidity"? New York Times Falsely Says Obama Is "Struggling To Maintain Parity" In Polls With McCain
- He turned delirious, but in one moment of lucidity he told them, according to Cabeza de Vaca, Each man should do what he thought best to save his own life. Dream State
- The chief feature of the plan is its lucidity, despite the fact that the building had to be fitted into a highly restricted site.
- Sargent's work is marked by its exceptional lucidity, its exactness of expression and by the decisiveness of her results.
- But I think what is so painful about this particular character -- and, in fact, a lot of characters I've taken on who find communication difficult -- is that they are people with a kind of lucidity inside. Brad Balfour: Golden Globe Nominee Colin Firth Refines The King's Speech
- And sizzling lucidity distinguishes this enormously entertaining novel about rationality and unreason. Times, Sunday Times
- For some reason, some magical reason, in this bath of lucidity, flesh itself took on an almost alchemical palpability. A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set
- Connected to the terrible lucidity of the condemned man in the tumbril is the unearthly lucidity of the pre-epileptic aura, bliss without time or space, eternity in an instant.
- Rarely does a new Ring cycle begin with such confidence and lucidity, on stage and in the pit.