Exhaustion vs Goneness - What's the difference?
exhaustion | goneness |
The point of complete depletion, of the state of being used up.
Supreme tiredness; having exhausted energy.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=19 (dated, chemistry) The removal (by percolation etc) of an active medicinal constituent from plant material.
(dated, physics) The removal of all air from a vessel (the creation of a vacuum).
(maths) An exhaustive procedure
The state or quality of being gone, i.e. no longer present.
* 1999 , Vivian Patraka, Spectacular Suffering: Theatre, Fascism, and the Holocaust
(US, informal) A state of exhaustion or faintness, especially from hunger.
As nouns the difference between exhaustion and goneness
is that exhaustion is the point of complete depletion, of the state of being used up while goneness is the state or quality of being gone, ie no longer present.exhaustion
English
Noun
(en-noun)citation, passage=As soon as Julia returned with a constable, Timothy, who was on the point of exhaustion , prepared to give over to him gratefully. The newcomer turned out to be a powerful youngster, fully trained and eager to help, and he stripped off his tunic at once.}}
Synonyms
* See alsoDerived terms
* proof by exhaustiongoneness
English
Noun
(-)- It is the goneness of the Holocaust that produces the simultaneous profusion of discourses and understandings; the goneness is what opens up, what spurs, what unleashes the perpetual desire to do, to make, to rethink the Holocaust.