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English

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Etymology

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From lake +‎ -ness.

Noun

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lakeness (uncountable)

  1. The state or quality of being a lake.
    • 1977, J. Bryan Moffet, Teaching Elementary School Social Studies, Little, Brown, published 1977, page 184:
      Children who have seen a small lake surrounded by a white sand beach have beginning ideas of what lakeness is.
    • 1995, Ralph Lombreglia, Make Me Work, Penguin, →ISBN, page 100:
      Sam was painting big abstract landscapes in those days — masses of green and brown and blue plucked from the world around here — and he would tell me the right way to look at the lake, how to empty myself of all thoughts of lakeness, and just see the thing.
    • 2002, Harvey Manning, Walking the Beach to Bellingham, Oregon State University Press, →ISBN, page 113:
      Ahead stretched miles of the unknown, lands and waters resembling my home waters, yet not quite it. There was a disturbing feeling of lakeness: unlike four-doored Possession Sound and multi-doored Puget, Port Susan had but a single door.

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