| Information | |
|---|---|
| has gloss | (noun) the property of being pure and fresh (as if newly made); not stale or deteriorated; "she loved the freshness of newly baked bread"; "the freshness of the air revived him" freshness |
| lexicalization | eng: freshness |
| subclass of | (noun) the quality of being new; the opposite of oldness newness |
| has subclass | (noun) a pleasing firmness and freshness; "crispness of new dollar bills"; "crispness of fresh lettuce" crispness |
| Meaning | |
|---|---|
| Catalan | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | cat: frescor |
| German | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | deu: Frische |
| Esperanto | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | epo: malvarmeto |
| French | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | fra: fraîcheur |
| Italian | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | ita: freschezza |
| Occitan (post 1500) | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | oci: frescor |
| Moldavian | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | ron: prospețime |
| Castilian | |
| Show unreliable ▼ | |
| lexicalization | spa: frescura |
| Links | |
|---|---|
| opposite | (noun) having lost purity and freshness as a consequence of aging staleness |
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