infestivity

English

Etymology

in- + festivity

Noun

infestivity (uncountable)

  1. Lack of festivity, cheerfulness, or mirth.
    • 1881, Thomas Hardy, A Laodicean, ch. 15:
      Her days of infestivity were plainly ended, and her days of gladness were to begin.
    • 1903, Frederic Stewart Isham, Under the Rose, →ISBN (2009 reprint), p. 70:
      Moreover, Caillette experienced a superior sadness, sifted through years of infestivity and gloom.
    • 1989, Robert McLiam Wilson, Ripley Bogle, →ISBN (1998 Arcade edition), p. 256:
      May Week. . . . As in every year, that infamous week was dragging its boorish heels with remarkable infestivity.
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