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Meaning of Particularity | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1
pəˌtɪkjʊˈlæɹɪti

Definitions

  1. A particular thing.
  2. A distinctive characteristic or quality; a peculiarity.
  3. A particular case or matter.
  4. The condition of being particular rather than general or universal; specificity.
  5. The doctrine of the incarnation of God as Jesus occurring at a particular place and time.
  6. Synonym of particularism (“the principle that only certain people are chosen by God for salvation”).
  7. Attention to detail; fastidiousness.
  8. The condition of being special; peculiarity, specialness.
  9. The condition of being special in an unexpected way; oddness, strangeness; (countable) an instance of this.
  10. The paying of particular close attention to someone; (countable) an instance of this.

Equivalents

العربية الخاصية خصوص
Azərbaycanca təfərrüat
Català particularitat
Español particularidad
Gaeilge leithleachas
हिन्दी विशेषता
Italiano particolarità
日本語 固有 特殊性
Lietuvių ypatybė
Македонски особеност
Português particularidade
Română particularitate
Русский подро́бность

Examples

“In this particularity vvhereof vve novv ſpeake, ſee hovv his Mercy and Truth are met together, and doe moſt lovingly embrace each other.”
“[I]f they never hear plain truth from men, they see the best of every thing, in every kind, and they see things so grouped and amassed as to infer easily the sum and genius, instead of tedious particularities.”
“Donny’s obsession for trains is just a harmless particularity of his.”
“Novv let the generall Trumpet blovv his blaſt, / Particularities, and pettie ſounds / To ceaſe.”
“[W]e Chriſtians, vnto vvhom it is reuealed in particularity, that all Men came from one Lumpe of Earth; […]”
“But true Religion sprung from God above / Is like her fountain full of charity, / […] / [F]ree, large, even infinite, / Not wedg'd in strait particularity, / But grasping all in her vast active spright, / Bright lamp of God! that men would joy in thy pure light!”
“An indefinite Propoſition, is, vvhen no Note, either of Univerſality or Particularity, is prefixed to a Subject, vvhich is in its ovvn Nature general; as, a Planet is ever changing its Place: Angels are noble Creatures.”
“There is no part of the Goſpel vvrit vvith ſo copious a Particularity, as the Hiſtory of his [Jesus's] Sufferings and Death; as there vvas indeed no part of the Goſpel ſo important as this is.”
“Sir Rovvland himſelf, as you vvill gueſs by his particularity, is an old bachelor, and one vvho vvants to have a vvoman made on purpoſe for his nephevv; and vvho poſitively inſiſts upon qualities, before he knovvs her, not one of vvhich, perhaps, his future niece vvill have.”
“I must not be expected to describe our first day's work, or (for that matter) any of the rest, in order and detail as it occurred. Such particularity might have been possible for several officers and a draft of men from a ship of war, accompanied by an experienced secretary with a knowledge of shorthand.”
“To pass my evenings in so sweet a conversation, and have the esteem of a woman of your merit, has in it a particularity of happiness no more to be expressed than returned.”
“No man ought to be tolerated in a habitual humour, whim, or particularity of behaviour, by any who do not wait upon him for bread.”
“Lucy looks at her uncle as if ſhe could hardly excuſe his particularities; but Mrs. Shirley has alvvays ſomething to ſay for him.”
“He had another particuliarity, of vvhich none of his friends ever ventured to aſk an explanation. It appeared to me ſome ſuperſtitious habit, vvhich he had contracted early, and from vvhich he had never called upon his reaſon to diſ-entangle him. This vvas his anxious care to go out or in at a door or paſſage, by a certain number of ſteps from a certain point, […]”
“Whenever they met, they talked to each other aloud, chose each other partner at balls, saluted at the most conspicuous parts of the service of the church, and practised, in honour of each other, all the remarkable particularities which are usual for persons who admire one another, and are contemptible to the rest of the world.”
“While I, to blind the world to our engagement, was behaving one hour with objectionable particularity to another woman, was she to be consenting the next to a proposal which might have made every previous caution useless?”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
See all C1 English words →

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