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English

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Etymology

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From French verticalité.

Noun

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verticality (countable and uncountable, plural verticalities)

  1. Verticalness.
    • 1774, Edward Long, The History of Jamaica[1], London: T. Lowndes, Volume III, Book III, Chapter VII, Section X, p. 655:
      For these complicated reasons, although, when the sun is vertical, and darts a perpendicular ray, it is supposed to strike with greatest force; yet, in those countries where it is vertical twice a year, in passing to and from the Tropic of Cancer, the greatest heat is not during the instant of its verticalities, but some weeks after, when it is returning from one Tropic to the other, and its rays oblique.
    • 1847, Raphael Brandon and Joshua Arthur Brandon, An Analysis of Gothick Architecture, London: P. Richardson, Introduction, pp. 2-3,[2]
      A tendency to direct verticality, placing itself in, perhaps, violent contrast with the Romanesque horizontalism of the Anglo-Norman, had been in the Early English Gothick, the special characteristick of that beautiful style.
    • 1933, Robert Byron, First Russia, Then Tibet[3], Part II, Chapter 3:
      From their garden, a precarious terrace in a world of verticality, we could look down two or three thousand feet into the Teesta Valley below, an inky well imprisoning a fleet of porcelain clouds.

See also

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