rottingness
English
editEtymology
editFrom Middle English rotyngnesse; equivalent to rotting + -ness.
Noun
editrottingness (uncountable)
- (rare) Something which is undergoing rot or decomposition.
- 2016 February 1, Natasha Cooper, Sour Grapes: A Willow King Novel 7[2], Macmillan, page 93:
- […] I felt as though I could never get away from death and...and rottingness, and I wouldn't talk to him any more. I couldn't.' 'I'm not surprised,' said Willow gently. 'But because I wouldn't talk, Andrew started to come home later and later every day, and then afterwards I found out where he'd been.'
- 2018 February 19, Aharon R. E. Agus, Hermeneutic Biography in Rabbinic Midrash: The Body of this Death and Life[3], Walter de Gruyter, page 222:
- In such an enclosing autism the knowledge that God suffers one's agony can be a delivering knowledge indeed: One is not at all a vessel of rottingness; one is a real, living, feeling consciousness, even in the extreme experience of suffering - […]