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All physicality antonyms

phys·i·cal·i·ty
P p

noun physicality

  • academicians — Plural form of academician.
  • fancy — imagination or fantasy, especially as exercised in a capricious manner.
  • behaviorism — Behaviorism is the belief held by some psychologists that the only valid method of studying the psychology of people or animals is to observe how they behave.
  • feeling — a quality of an object that is perceived by feeling or touching: the soft feel of cotton.
  • breast — A woman's breasts are the two soft, round parts on her chest that can produce milk to feed a baby.
  • opinion — a belief or judgment that rests on grounds insufficient to produce complete certainty.
  • mind — (in a human or other conscious being) the element, part, substance, or process that reasons, thinks, feels, wills, perceives, judges, etc.: the processes of the human mind.
  • excitability — (uncountable) The state of being excitable.
  • belief — Belief is a feeling of certainty that something exists, is true, or is good.
  • marbles — metamorphosed limestone, consisting chiefly of recrystallized calcite or dolomite, capable of taking a high polish, occurring in a wide range of colors and variegations and used in sculpture and architecture.
  • mentality — mental capacity or endowment: a person of average mentality.
  • generalisation — The formulation of general concepts from specific instances by abstracting common properties.
  • close up — If someone closes up a building, they shut it completely and securely, often because they are going away.
  • in sight — an instance of apprehending the true nature of a thing, especially through intuitive understanding: an insight into 18th-century life.
  • ethos — belief system
  • high spirits — lively or boisterous mood
  • acuities — sharpness; acuteness; keenness: acuity of vision; acuity of mind.
  • apperception — the attainment of full awareness of a sensation or idea
  • acuity — Acuity is sharpness of vision or hearing, or quickness of thought.
  • medulla oblongata — the lowest or hindmost part of the brain, continuous with the spinal cord.
  • brainpower — Brainpower is intelligence or the ability to think.
  • mood — Grammar. a set of categories for which the verb is inflected in many languages, and that is typically used to indicate the syntactic relation of the clause in which the verb occurs to other clauses in the sentence, or the attitude of the speaker toward what he or she is saying, as certainty or uncertainty, wish or command, emphasis or hesitancy. a set of syntactic devices in some languages that is similar to this set in function or meaning, involving the use of auxiliary words, as can, may, might. any of the categories of these sets: the Latin indicative, imperative, and subjunctive moods.
  • brain — Your brain is the organ inside your head that controls your body's activities and enables you to think and to feel things such as heat and pain.
  • clearheadedness — The quality of being clearheaded.
  • iq — intelligence quotient
  • close-up — the end or conclusion: at the close of day; the close of the speech.
  • druthers — one's own way, choice, or preference: If I had my druthers, I'd dance all night.
  • academician — An academician is a member of an academy, usually one which has been formed to improve or maintain standards in a particular field.
  • encephalon — The brain.
  • impression — a strong effect produced on the intellect, feelings, conscience, etc.
  • headset — Radio, Telephony. a device consisting of one or two earphones with a headband for holding them over the ears and sometimes with a mouthpiece attached.
  • emotion — A natural instinctive state of mind deriving from one's circumstances, mood, or relationships with others.
  • cerebella — a large portion of the brain, serving to coordinate voluntary movements, posture, and balance in humans, being in back of and below the cerebrum and consisting of two lateral lobes and a central lobe.
  • cerebellum — The cerebellum is a part of the brain in humans and other mammals that controls the body's movements and balance.
  • closeup — a photograph taken at close range or with a long focal-length lens, on a relatively large scale.
  • cerebrum — the anterior portion of the brain of vertebrates, consisting of two lateral hemispheres joined by a thick band of fibres: the dominant part of the brain in man, associated with intellectual function, emotion, and personality
  • inner child — Some psychologists refer to a person's childish feelings as his or her inner child.
  • intellect — the power or faculty of the mind by which one knows or understands, as distinguished from that by which one feels and that by which one wills; the understanding; the faculty of thinking and acquiring knowledge.
  • intellection — the action or process of understanding; the exercise of the intellect; reasoning.
  • mindset — an attitude, disposition, or mood.
  • intellectuality — the quality or state of being intellectual.
  • generalization — the act or process of generalizing.
  • intelligence — capacity for learning, reasoning, understanding, and similar forms of mental activity; aptitude in grasping truths, relationships, facts, meanings, etc.
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