Use "looseness" in a sentence
looseness example sentences
looseness
1. His hand, because of the looseness of her tunic under it, moved up and down the side of her waistline
2. His hand, because of the looseness of her tunic under it,
3. Every footstep that swished over the looseness of a sand-covered rock on the way down to the
4. She fluffed and puffed her beautiful henna colored tresses and then shook her head slightly, just to mis-arrange her hairdo enough to give it that unplanned looseness that could be so sexy
5. How stupid of him to have killed that fellow! It’s as if the dead soul had left his share of problems to his upkeep as it were! And having earned a sentence for himself, hadn’t he granted her unfettered freedom to have her way, anyway she liked? If anything, the news of her looseness would have whetted the appetites of many in the neighborhood
6. The first thing O’Brien noticed was the looseness of his
7. Spitting blood from his mouth, he tested the looseness of a tooth with one finger
8. It is this air of looseness and availability that electrifies the male sex and sets the testosterone coursing
9. The war atmosphere with the allied soldiers, the general looseness of morals, the cabarets and brothels made for a hallucinatory environment
10. The unscriptural looseness with which this parable had been handed, just to sustain the age-worn doctrine, and as obsolete as it is old, is reasonable ground for condemnation of such conclusions as are drawn
11. At the behaviour level looseness is a state when a person hasn’t
12. The looseness of Muladhara at the behaviour level will show as
13. The sign of looseness for every chakra is that it can be easily
14. the practitioner has no looseness in his chakras
15. There was no looseness or abandon about her
16. Something had been buried there, quite recently, they could tell by the looseness of the earth
17. Why? Well, when sovereigns were flying about, why shouldn't he catch a few? He would never go far along that road again; but a man likes to assure himself, and men of pleasure generally, what he could do in the way of mischief if he chose, and that if he abstains from making himself ill, or beggaring himself, or talking with the utmost looseness which the narrow limits of human capacity will allow, it is not because he is a spooney