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otherworldliness
noun
The quality of being otherworldly
Exact(59)
His book is all preface and no body.Then there is his otherworldliness.
Equally characteristic was otherworldliness bordering on fantasy.
Budgeted at $25 million, the production teamed Rahman with the Finnish folk ensemble Värttinä to compose a musical score that captured the otherworldliness of J.R.R. Tolkien's creations.
The attenuation of city life in most of northern and western Europe was accompanied by provincial separatism, economic isolation, and religious otherworldliness.
Carroll agrees that the main benefit is in its very oddity, even its otherworldliness.
As they enter the bank, the decision to make use of 3D for the final episode seems a wise one, as puffs of smoke and blurred figures are used to create a sense of otherworldliness.
But he had strong tendencies toward egocentric aloofness, and the core of his personality remained dominated by Christian mysticism and Swedenborgian otherworldliness.
That is exactly what Tolstoy writes, because he wants us to experience a little shock of readjustment as the adult meets the otherworldliness of childish fantasy.
To put it in philosopher Leonard Peikoff's terms, Aristotle was interested in worldliness, Plato in otherworldliness.
Much was made of the composer's religiosity, his otherworldliness, his humble career as an organist at the Basilica of St. Clotilde.
Of course, the same thing could be said of Christie; indeed, his otherworldliness might be his greatest strength.
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