Ness in a sentence as a noun

Adults' time is taken up with the sacred family-ness we all must bow before. Children's time is taken up by their parents.

The relentless upbeat-ness of the startup world can get to be too much, and it's healthy to hear humbling stories of reality.

Apologies for the rantishness/possibly OT-ness of this post, but obv. quite a personal issue for me.

Maybe RMS sees a subtle distinction between death and gone-ness in his head. But I promise you that people in grief see absolutely no distinction between the death and the loss of the person they mourn.

>Maybe RMS sees a subtle distinction between death and gone-ness in his head. But I promise you that people in grief see absolutely no distinction between the death and the loss of the person they mourn.

This was never about the blog post, it was about the specific paragraph referencing Spotify and its P2P-ness.

The red delicious stands apart for its extreme crispness, and to those sensitive to it, biting in is like nails on a chalkboard. Also, it seems like one chew releases all the moisture, leaving a mouthful of dry bleh-ness with which to contend.

As one of the older folks on HN, I can tell you that death in the age of facebook is strange in that even when they are gone there's still a "there-ness" to them thanks to left over accounts. Its almost like at any moment, a tweet will pop up or an update to a wall...

If there are any negative vibes towards a person because of their background, it's only ever because of their "foreign-ness"; if for example they might have an accent. Even this is quickly brushed off wherever I've worked.

As an engineer I've found that once I can 'calibrate' someone's 'yes-ness' I can then work with them, understanding that they only make 'wishful' commitments rather than 'reasoned' commitments. So when someone, like Steve Jobs, says "we're going to make it an open standard!"

Recruiters are probably just frustrated by the lack of linked-in-ness, and the fact that most people competent at "Data Science" don't know what that means. Here are things virtually every PhD in a computational discipline will have done: 1.

I know the saying is "don't look a gift horse in the mouth", but could it be that their graphics cores are not competitive in pure technical capabilities, so they've decided to compete on open-ness? I'm not really involved in that area of hardware/software.

Ignorance is not unique to any side, and well-versed-ness is not a requirement for having an opinion. And from where I'm sitting, Robertson, Lewis, Falwell, Phelps, the Greeks, the Romans, they all make the same fundamental mistakes in logic as far as I'm concerned.

I don't doubt that having a particular ethnic background helps in certain situations, but "privilege" suggests a certain binary-ness that doesn't accurately capture all the nuances of race and ethnicity in America. For instance, there's a large amount of variation among different Asian groups.

John is saying that Apple's products have an "Apple-ness", as does each app on each product, each feature within each app, etc. He is suggesting that the zen-like simplicity of Apple can be found at many different levels of the organization.

There was religion, there was national identity, there was immigrant status, there was language, there was hope of another homeland, their was separateness/insular-ness, etc. I come from the point of view that nationalism is a bit outdated.

It's easily salvageable and the designer was on the right track: Just bright up planet earth, contrast the continents from the ocean more, remove the 3D-ness of the fox's tail, further simplify or remove the tail's inner fur spikes, and soften the gradient of orange to yellow that runs across the fox's body and get rid of those annoying hairs that one can only see when zoomed in 400%.

Ness definitions

noun

a strip of land projecting into a body of water

See also: cape