rankness

English

Etymology

From rank + -ness.

Noun

rankness (countable and uncountable, plural ranknesses)

  1. The quality of being rank, of having a repulsive or pungent odor.
  2. Exuberant or uncontrolled growth.
    • 1706, John Dryden, “To my Dear Friend Mr. Congreve, On His Comedy, call’d, The Double-Dealer” in The Double Dealer by William Congreve, London: Jacob Tonson,
      Like Janus he the stubborn Soil manur’d,
      With Rules of Husbandry the Rankness cur’d:
      Tam’d us to Manners, when the Stage was rude;
      And boistrous English Wit, with Art indu’d.
    • 1847, Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights, Chapter 18,
      [] a wilderness of weeds, to be sure, whose rankness far over-topped their neglected growth; yet, notwithstanding, evidence of a wealthy soil, that might yield luxuriant crops under other and favourable circumstances.
    • 1970, Barry Unsworth, The Hide, New York: Norton, 1997, p. 139,
      [] briar and bramble shoots lay athwart one’s path with thorns like arrowheads often concealed in tangles of grass and willowherb and cow parsley, while underlying this rankness, like a reminder of a more elegant epoch, one was aware at times of Howard’s cultivation, rose and magnolia and peony continued to flower []
  3. (obsolete) Exuberance, excessiveness.
    • c. 1612, William Shakespeare and John Fletcher, Henry VIII, Act IV, Scene 1,
      First Gentleman. God save you, sir! where have you been broiling?
      Third Gentleman. Among the crowd i’ the Abbey; where a finger
      Could not be wedged in more: I am stifled
      With the mere rankness of their joy.
  4. (obsolete) Insolence.

Translations

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