beggingness
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]beggingness (uncountable)
- The state or quality of being begging.
- 1845, “The Lawfulness of Begging Maintained by Friars”, in Robert Vaughan, editor, Tracts and treatises of John de Wycliffe, D.D. : with selections and translations from his manuscripts, and Latin works, Blackburn and Pardon, →OCLC:
- Also the Holy Ghost taught Solomon to pray these two things of God: God make vanity and leasing words far from me, and give not to me begging or beggingness; but give only things that beene needfull for my livelode; […]
- 1860, George Moberly, “Sermon I”, in Sermons on the Beatitudes, J.H. and Jas. Parker:
- And may we not remember that the poverty of spirit of this Beatitude is, if we pursue the Greek word exactly, rather a beseechingness, a beggingness, if I may coin such a term, of spirit?
- 1980, Idealistic Studies - Volumes 10-11, page 252:
- But for appreciation of the sheer question beggingness of Moore's arguments, there is no substitute for reading "External and Internal Relations" and "The Refutation of Idealism" themselves.
- 2018, “Visions”, in Brodric Wellington, Joseph Pap (lyrics), Memory, performed by Ivan:
- He remained nameless and he would not speak
but motioned in a slumberous dance
a beggingness that penetrated
and united all around him