See Also: VAGUENESS
To give added emphasis and specificity, there’s “Heavy as overcooked dumplings,” “Heavy as matzoh balls,” “Heavy as latkes,” “Heavy as wontons.”
Noun | 1. | heaviness - the property of being comparatively great in weight; "the heaviness of lead" weight - the vertical force exerted by a mass as a result of gravity preponderance - exceeding in heaviness; having greater weight; "the least preponderance in either pan will unbalance the scale" weightlessness, lightness - the property of being comparatively small in weight; "the lightness of balsa wood" |
2. | heaviness - persisting sadness; "nothing lifted the heaviness of her heart after her loss" sadness, unhappiness - emotions experienced when not in a state of well-being | |
3. | heaviness - an oppressive quality that is laborious and solemn and lacks grace or fluency; "a book so serious that it sometimes subsided into ponderousness"; "his lectures tend to heaviness and repetition" uninterestingness - inability to capture or hold one's interest | |
4. | heaviness - used of a line or mark | |
5. | heaviness - unwelcome burdensome difficulty difficultness, difficulty - the quality of being difficult; "they agreed about the difficulty of the climb" |