bodaciousness
English
Etymology
Noun
bodaciousness (uncountable)
- The quality of being bodacious.
- 2005, Dorothy Otnow Lewis, “Adult Antisocial Behavior, Criminality, and Violence”, in Benjamin J[ames] Sadock, Virginia A[lcott] Sadock, editors, Kaplan & Sadock’s Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry, 8th edition, volume II, Philadephia, Pa.: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, →ISBN, chapter 26 […], page 2260, column 1:
- The silliness of a mink tuxedo, the hypersexuality and indiscretions of a sexagenarian cavorting with teenagers, the “bodaciousness” of a Florida banker flaunting his multimillion-dollar art collection as his banking empire collapses—these kinds of behaviors go beyond simple greed and arrogance.
- 2009, Jabari Asim, “At the Threshold”, in What Obama Means … For Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Future, New York, N.Y.: William Morrow, →ISBN, page 78:
- […] Fox contributor Liz Trotta jokingly wished for the assassination of Sen. Barack Obama. […] To many African Americans, more disturbing than the sheer bodaciousness of such comments was the probability that Huckabee, Clinton, and Trotta merely said aloud what many, many others were thinking.