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atrociousness
noun
The state of being atrocious
Exact(7)
Focussing on terrorists in Italy and Germany today, writer finds that they are unprecedented neither in the atrociousness of their acts nor in the fundamental romanticism and irrationality of their avowed aims.
As a general rule, heavy breathing is unnecessary, and even counterproductive, when a writer's subject is atrocity, and much of Goldhagen's book is a compilation of atrociousness: seemingly endless passages recount the awful things said about Jews over the past several years.
Dr. Appelbaum, of Columbia, said the jury would measure the atrociousness of Mr. Holmes' crime against the degree of his impairment and decide whether it is fair to punish him.
Media organisations face a particular dilemma, as the atrociousness arguably makes the crimes even more newsworthy.
No doubt the intensity of his early religious training contributed to his capacity to let perpetual light shine upon the quotidian, yet this religious poet was inhabited by another who was, in a very precise sense, a secular Milosz, one afflicted by the atrociousness of the saeculum he was fated to live through.
"Re: Bremen's atrociousness, esp. at set pieces - don't people ever practice these things?" thunders Paul Szabo.
To the film's credit, these moments of absolute atrociousness aren't too common.
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