trimness

English

Etymology

trim + -ness

Noun

trimness (usually uncountable, plural trimnesses)

  1. The property of being trim.
    The lawn's trimness impressed the home and garden award committee.
    • 1749, John Cleland, “part 4”, in Fanny Hill: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, London: G. Fenton, OCLC 13050889:
      The silky hair that covered round the borders, now smooth'd and re-pruned, had resumed its wonted curl and trimness; the fleshy pouting lips that had stood the brunt of the engagement, were no longer swollen or moisture-drenched

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