lacunosity

English

Etymology

lacunose + -ity

Noun

lacunosity (uncountable)

  1. The quality of being lacunose.
    • 2000, Transactions of the American Philological Association:
      The variegated, inconsistent picture it presents is no trick played by its lacunosity, but a function of its diverse origins and uses; thus in a text like Idyll, it is not simply a question for us to unravel syncretistic matter from some essential Adonia.
    • 2002, Paul Arthur, Naples, from Roman Town to City-state: An Archaeological Perspective, →ISBN:
      Though I shall develop my argument using archaeological and textual data, I want to stress the lacunosity of the various types of evidence for the construction of real temporal sequences, whether they be historical or archaeological.
    • 2009, Juan González Nieto, Guojun Wang, Wolfgang Reif, Autonomic and Trusted Computing, →ISBN:
      One strength of the approach has been the ease with which the physical conditions of connectedness and lacunosity arise as necessary for correctness.

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