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realness

[ UK /ɹˈi‍əlnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. the state of being actual or real
    the reality of his situation slowly dawned on him

How To Use realness In A Sentence

  • That's why is has to do with the unacknowledged and not the unknown, since ultimate realness is where we ALREADY ARE and this means our lives are grounded in that which we may "repress" (collectively or otherwise); however, please note that when you repress something, say death, you have to know what to repress in order to repress it. Humanity in general, and America in particular, have become contemptuous of wisdom
  • The dance floor is crowded with performers who are preening either with feminine realness or clownish flamboyance.
  • We are totally captivated, both emotionally and intellectually, by all the imaginary realness of the dream.
  • If we can still be rational and logic in romance, indeed , its realness should be questioned.
  • Estelle Hanania's images explore otherworldly spaces, the sharp realness of her photographs a startling contrast to the ethereality of their subjects -- burning hands, glittery crystals, spookily-real human scarecrows, and men dressed as eery, totem-like birds. Where The Wild Things Are: Photographer Estelle Hanania On Planet Mag
  • The idea seemed to be that tattered jeans were somehow redolent with realness, or even a kind of sociopolitical cachet. Anatomy Of A Fad
  • On a dance floor crowded with drag performers who are preening either with feminine realness or clownish flamboyance, Aviance is a unique creature.
  • Any time someone calls a transperson by their birth pronoun or birth name - despite the trans person requesting that people use their preferred pronoun or name - that realness is being called into question. Undefined
  • An odd sort of surrealness has glazed over the events of the past two weeks as I continue my relatively peaceful existence on my college campus.
  • It’s no coincidence that 2006’s best scripted dramas — The Wire, HBO’s multi-season epic of inner-city Baltimore; and Children of Men, Alfonso Cuarón’s futuristic thriller — were studies in meticulously crafted “realness,” deploying naturalistic dialogue, decentered and chaotic action, stutter-step pacing, and a reporter’s eye for the telling detail. The Case for Reality TV
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