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otherworldliness

[ UK /ˈʌðəwˌɜːldlinəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. concern with things of the spirit

How To Use otherworldliness In A Sentence

  • The conception of this landscape as ‘remote’ supports the common depiction of the Hoa Hao religion as one of inwardness or otherworldliness.
  • In his time the religious energy and zeal were flowing away from the empirical world into the desert of otherworldliness, asceticism and renunciation.
  • Even now, there is an aura of otherworldliness about him.
  • She used the coolness of the colors portraying the "Earth Light" in this scene to emphasize its otherworldliness.
  • The fact of his otherworldliness only partially excuses the naive presentation of Scottish culture as some kind of pure, folklorish antidote to the oppressive urbanity of London living; one wonders how this play would be received north of the English border. Variety.com
  • Even the battle scenes are choreographed with a kind of tai chi otherworldliness. 'Cymbeline': A fairy tale without magic
  • That otherworldliness could make him a captivating writer but not always a terrific husband.
  • Bergman moves the entire sequence from gothic, candle-illuminated lighting to electric, reflecting both the otherworldliness of the atmosphere and its unbeautiful blandness.
  • These strange forms exude a sense of magical, super-human power, evoking a quality both bestial and human, and an otherworldliness that is fantastic and supernatural.
  • During these years, many Protestants embraced a pessimistic premillennialism that predicted societal decline, undercut efforts at social reform, and emphasized individual evangelism, spirituality, and otherworldliness.
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