Get Free Checker

reflectiveness

NOUN
  1. the capability of quiet thought or contemplation

How To Use reflectiveness In A Sentence

  • When a first-class work of literature is made into a movie, one always feels that some essential quality has been lost: an engagement with language, a reflectiveness, a guiding intelligence.
  • The preference of auditory learning indicates your basic reflectiveness coupled with a tendency to process information sequentially.
  • The prose is characterized by a rare freshness of language as well as a sense of discreet reflectiveness. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The reflectiveness of the scales helps add a little sheen. The Sun
  • Which is to say, how maieutic reflectiveness is literonormative. War of All Against All: Realism vs Fabulism? Er, No…
  • Yet they still continued to record wonderful music together, and continued the themes of reflectiveness and vulnerability on the next album, ‘The Visitors’ a year later.
  • Nevertheless, You've Got a Friend (against Noble's soft, gospelly chording) has a confiding solemnity, there's an exposed and soulful fragility to Home Again, Way Over Yonder and the title track and, after Noble's gliding Brad Mehldau-like intro, Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow has a sombre reflectiveness. Christine Tobin/Liam Noble: Tapestry Unravelled
  • They found that the Earth's reflectiveness, or the amount of cloud cover, declined steadily from 1985 to 1995, and fell even more dramatically between 1996 and 1997.
  • Textually lean surely does not have to mean lean on reflectiveness. The Times Literary Supplement
  • But he lacked the tragic reflectiveness of the more fully realized dandy: he was simply too dim. The Times Literary Supplement
View all