Vitality in a sentence as a noun

Your character got 5 stat points per level which you could, if you wanted, put all into vitality.

For instance, in Diablo II a high level item would give +20 vitality.

I don't think I need to say a lot about this; this community interacts enough with HN for its vitality to be clear enough.

I turned 40 last year, and work in technology, so I'm always surrounded by 20-something youth and vitality.

In both games there's an easy and obvious way to get a bulletproof character: plow everything you have into vitality and endurance.

Although the symmetry of the design is inline with the tennets of Minimalism, it unfortunately makes for a piece that lacks movement and vitality.

It seems as if real estate has mutated into this hungry sponge that sucks up all surplus economic vitality from any region that experiences success.

Even after the horrors of 9/11, I am still alive; full of vitality, love, sex and, later tonight, that large ***** rubber-banded to the water you are about to confiscate from me.

]This, like every other "patent on three hours' work", is nothing more than parasitic rent-seeking behavior, and it is anathema to the vitality of our economy.

The page linked in the article is worth a couple of chuckles: "The US sugar industry is almost as important to our economic vitality as is a steady supply of affordable energy.

The once-chained people whose leaders at last lose their grip on information flow will soon burst with freedom and vitality, but the free nation gradually constricting its grip on public discourse has begun its rapid slide into despotism.

"***** continued vitality is even more amazing when compared to the fate of its sixteenth century synonyms: jape and sarde are virtually unknown; Chaucers swive is archaic; and occupy returns to English with a nonsexual meaning.

By contrast, it is incredibly hard to find the motivation to update, for the umpteenth time, a warty API -- and that's precisely the reason why contributions of the latter sort are the truer test of the vitality of a language's ecosystem.

These high-density urban high-rises relieve the pressure on the remaining, cheaper, low density residential properties, while simultaneously adding additional economic growth and neighborhood vitality.

Vitality definitions

noun

an energetic style

See also: verve

noun

a healthy capacity for vigorous activity; "jogging works off my excess energy"; "he seemed full of vim and vigor"

See also: energy

noun

(biology) a hypothetical force (not physical or chemical) once thought by Henri Bergson to cause the evolution and development of organisms

noun

the property of being able to survive and grow; "the vitality of a seed"

See also: animation