13-letter words that end in ess
- forbiddenness — a past participle of forbid.
- foresightless — lacking foresight
- forgetfulness — apt to forget; that forgets: a forgetful person.
- forgivingness — disposed to forgive; indicating forgiveness: a forgiving soul; a forgiving smile.
- forgottenness — the status of being forgotten
- fortunateness — The quality of being fortunate; fortune; luck.
- fractiousness — refractory or unruly: a fractious animal that would not submit to the harness.
- frightfulness — The quality of being frightful.
- frivolousness — characterized by lack of seriousness or sense: frivolous conduct.
- fruitlessness — The quality of being fruitless.
- fugaciousness — (obsolete) fugacity.
- full laziness — (functional programming) A transformation, described by Wadsworth in 1971, which ensures that subexpressions in a function body which do not depend on the function's arguments are only evaluated once. E.g. each time the function f x = x + sqrt 4 is applied, (sqrt 4) will be evaluated. Since (sqrt 4) does not depend on x, we could transform this to: f x = x + sqrt4 sqrt4 = sqrt 4 We have replaced the dynamically created (sqrt 4) with a single shared constant which, in a graph reduction system, will be evaluated the first time it is needed and then updated with its value. See also fully lazy lambda lifting, let floating.
- furaciousness — the quality of being furacious or thievish
- garrulousness — Garrulity.
- george inness — George, 1825–94, and his son George, 1854–1926, U.S. painters.
- glutinousness — The quality of being glutinous.
- gracelessness — The state of being graceless.
- grand duchess — the wife or widow of a grand duke.
- grandioseness — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
- great goddess — The, a vaguely defined deity symbolizing maternity, the fertility of the earth, and femininity in general; the central figure in the religions of ancient Anatolia, the Near East, and the eastern Mediterranean, later sometimes taking the form of a specific goddess, as Cybele, Rhea, or Demeter.
- green goddess — an army fire engine
- greensickness — chlorosis (def 2).
- grotesqueness — odd or unnatural in shape, appearance, or character; fantastically ugly or absurd; bizarre.
- guilelessness — free from guile; sincere; honest; straightforward; frank.
- guiltlessness — The state of being guiltless; innocence.
- haber process — a process for synthesizing ammonia from gaseous nitrogen and hydrogen under high pressure and temperature in the presence of a catalyst.
- haphazardness — characterized by lack of order or planning, by irregularity, or by randomness; determined by or dependent on chance; aimless.
- hazardousness — The condition of being hazardous.
- healthfulness — conducive to health; wholesome or salutary: a healthful diet.
- heartfeltness — The state or quality of being heartfelt.
- heartlessness — The characteristic of being heartless.
- heartsickness — The condition of being heartsick.
- hilariousness — The characteristic of being hilarious; hilarity.
- honorableness — The property of being honorable.
- hotheadedness — The state or characteristic of being hotheaded; the tendency to be easily infuriated or provoked.
- houselessness — Lack of a house; homelessness.
- housemistress — A female teacher in charge of a dormitory at a boarding school.
- humorlessness — The state, quality, or condition of lacking humor.
- identicalness — The state or quality of being identical.
- idiomaticness — Idiomaticity.
- illiberalness — The state of being illiberal; illiberality.
- illogicalness — The quality of being illogical.
- imaginariness — The state of being imaginary.
- imitativeness — imitating; copying; given to imitation.
- immediateness — The state of being immediate; immediacy.
- immersiveness — The quality or degree of being immersive.
- immovableness — The quality of being immovable.
- immutableness — The state of being immutable; unchangeableness.
- impactfulness — The quality of being impactful.
- impartialness — The quality of being impartial.