Synonyms for ornateness


Grammar : Noun
Spell : awr-neyt
Phonetic Transcription : ɔrˈneɪt

Top 10 synonyms for ornateness Other synonyms for the word ornateness

Définition of ornateness

Origin :
  • early 15c., from Latin ornatus "fitted out, furnished, supplied; adorned, decorated, embellished," past participle of ornare "adorn, fit out," from stem of ordo "order" (see order (n.)). Earliest reference is to literary style. Related: Ornately; ornateness.
  • As in urbanity : noun elegance
  • As in elegance : noun cultivated beauty, taste
Example sentences :
  • As we should expect, there is a fairly steady movement from simplicity to ornateness.
  • Extract from : « Old Picture Books » by Alfred W. Pollard
  • There was a striving for effect, with ornateness and extravagance, and finally the art passed out entirely.
  • Extract from : « A Text-Book of the History of Painting » by John C. Van Dyke
  • The ornateness of architecture appears in the East and West in nearly equal measure.
  • Extract from : « Prowling about Panama » by George A. Miller
  • The writing masters of that time cared far more for ornateness than for verity, or even legibility.
  • Extract from : « A Captain in the Ranks » by George Cary Eggleston
  • It was the time when ornateness of figure and poeticalness of diction were regarded as essentials of style.
  • Extract from : « A History of American Literature Since 1870 » by Fred Lewis Pattee
  • Some of the extra-illuminated books of this period are among the most beautiful printed books ever issued in their ornateness.
  • Extract from : « The Century of Columbus » by James J. Walsh
  • The prize tools reflected little of the ornateness apparent in the wares of most of the other exhibitors.
  • Extract from : « Woodworking Tools 1600-1900 » by Peter C. Welsh
  • The emphasis in these rhetorics on style is the same: ornateness in communication is achieved through using the figures.
  • Extract from : « A Treatise of Schemes and Tropes » by Richard Sherry
  • It is a sound policy to avoid the ornateness that frequently accompanies a large and unskillfully planned area.
  • Extract from : « Industrial Arts Design » by William H. Varnum
  • Tristrem repeated, utterly unimpressed by the ornateness of the novelist's remarks.
  • Extract from : « The Truth About Tristrem Varick » by Edgar Saltus

Antonyms for ornateness

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019