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Word Meanings - SAPIDITY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The quality or state of being sapid; taste; savor; savoriness. Whether one kind of sapidity is more effective than another. M. S. Lamson.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of SAPIDITY)

Possible antonyms: (opposite words of SAPIDITY)

Related words: (words related to SAPIDITY)

  • JUDGMENT
    The final award; the last sentence. Note: Judgment, abridgment, acknowledgment, and lodgment are in England sometimes written, judgement, abridgement, acknowledgement, and lodgement. Note: Judgment is used adjectively in many self-explaining
  • CHOICE
    1. Worthly of being chosen or preferred; select; superior; precious; valuable. My choicest hours of life are lost. Swift. 2. Preserving or using with care, as valuable; frugal; -- used with of; as, to be choice of time, or of money. 3. Selected
  • SAVORINESS
    The quality of being savory.
  • CHOICELY
    1. With care in choosing; with nice regard to preference. "A band of men collected choicely, from each county some." Shak. 2. In a preferable or excellent manner; excellently; eminently. "Choicely good." Walton.
  • RELISHABLE
    Capable of being relished; agreeable to the taste; gratifying.
  • SAVOROUS
    Having a savor; savory. Rom. of R.
  • PERCEPTION
    The faculty of perceiving; the faculty, or peculiar part, of man's constitution by which he has knowledge through the medium or instrumentality of the bodily organs; the act of apperhending material objects or qualities through the senses;
  • ENHANCEMENT
    The act of increasing, or state of being increased; augmentation; aggravation; as, the enhancement of value, price, enjoyments, crime.
  • NICETY
    1. The quality or state of being nice (in any of the senses of that word.). The miller smiled of her nicety. Chaucer. 2. Delicacy or exactness of perception; minuteness of observation or of discrimination; precision. 3. A delicate expression, act,
  • FLAVORED
    Having a distinct flavor; as, high-flavored wine.
  • REJECTER
    One who rejects.
  • SAVORLY
    In a savory manner. Barrow.
  • FLAVORLESS
    Without flavor; tasteless.
  • REJECT
    re- + jacere to throw: cf. F. rejeter, formerly also spelt rejecter. 1. To cast from one; to throw away; to discard. Therefore all this exercise of hunting . . . the Utopians have rejected to their butchers. Robynson . Reject me not from among
  • DISCERNMENT
    1. The act of discerning. 2. The power or faculty of the mind by which it distinguishes one thing from another; power of viewing differences in objects, and their relations and tendencies; penetrative and discriminate mental vision; acuteness;
  • PREDILECTION
    A previous liking; a prepossession of mind in favor of something; predisposition to choose or like; partiality. Burke.
  • CHOICEFUL
    Making choices; fickle. His choiceful sense with every change doth fit. Spenser.
  • SENSIBILITY
    The quality or state of being sensible, or capable of sensation; capacity to feel or perceive. 2. The capacity of emotion or feeling, as distinguished from the intellect and the will; peculiar susceptibility of impression, pleasurable or painful;
  • REFINEMENT
    1. The act of refining, or the state of being refined; as, the refinement or metals; refinement of ideas. The more bodies are of kin to spirit in subtilty and refinement, the more diffusive are they. Norris. From the civil war to this time, I doubt
  • REJECTANEOUS
    Not chosen orr received; rejected. "Profane, rejectaneous, and reprobate people." Barrow.
  • INSENSIBILITY
    1. The state or quality of being insensible; want of sensibility; torpor; unconsciousness; as, the insensibility produced by a fall, or by opiates. 2. Want of tenderness or susceptibility of emotion or passion; dullness; stupidity. Syn.
  • IRREJECTABLE
    That can not be rejected; irresistible. Boyle.
  • ATTASTE
    To taste or cause to taste. Chaucer.
  • PREJUDGMENT
    The act of prejudging; decision before sufficient examination.
  • APPERCEPTION
    The mind's perception of itself as the subject or actor in its own states; perception that reflects upon itself; sometimes, intensified or energetic perception. Leibnitz. Reid. This feeling has been called by philosophers the apperception

 

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