English

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Etymology

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From wordful +‎ -ness.

Noun

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wordfulness (uncountable)

  1. (uncommon) Wordiness; verbosity; verboseness. [from late 19th c.]
    • 1898 September, Grille, “A Lady's Impressions of the House of Commons”, in Leopold Maxse, editor, The National Review[1], volume 32, number 187, page 120:
      So far as he has yet gone in Parliament it is impossible to forget that the Bill is his Brief, and whether it be of less or greater importance, he speaks with the same conscientious preparation, and identically the same impressive wordfulness.
    • 1941, Charles S. Macfarland, “Contemporary Theology” (chapter I), in Current Religious Thought: A Digest, Fleming H. Revell Company, A Christian Anthropology (section 5), page 35:
      This volume is, in its way, a masterpiece of erudition ; it mingles flashes of beauty with wordfulness and meaningless exposition and, as the reviewer intimated at the beginning, reaches, as deductions, the presuppositions with which it starts out—conclusions which, however, were made more persuasive in the simpler words of Jesus.
    • 1980, John Morton, “The Logogen Model and Orthographic Structure”, in Uta Frith, editor, Cognitive Processes in Spelling, Academic Press, page 132:
      Clearly some spelling errors must arise from the operation of this system but the relative paucity of spelling errors resulting in non-words indicates that the outcome of the rules is checked for appropriate pronunciation and for wordfulness.