Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The quality of being familial.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

familial +‎ -ity

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Examples

  • As the sun set on the hills, the interior of the restaurant was lit with a warm red glow that did not subtract from its refrigerated coolness but only added to its atmosphere of goodwill and end-of-the-day familiality.

    Rain Gods James Lee Burke 2009

  • As the sun set on the hills, the interior of the restaurant was lit with a warm red glow that did not subtract from its refrigerated coolness but only added to its atmosphere of goodwill and end-of-the-day familiality.

    Rain Gods James Lee Burke 2009

  • As the sun set on the hills, the interior of the restaurant was lit with a warm red glow that did not subtract from its refrigerated coolness but only added to its atmosphere of goodwill and end-of-the-day familiality.

    Rain Gods James Lee Burke 2009

  • Food lubricates the merrymaking machine, along with alcohol for Chinese New Year, its always Hennessey XO or Jolly Shandy, providing a sense of familiality and communion.

    Year Of The Rat-ta-to -ille Eeleen Lee 2008

  • Food lubricates the merrymaking machine, along with alcohol for Chinese New Year, its always Hennessey XO or Jolly Shandy, providing a sense of familiality and communion.

    Archive 2008-02-01 Eeleen Lee 2008

  • "These findings further support the familiality and validity of bipolar in youth and indicate a need for early identification and treatment," the researchers said.

    MedPageToday.com - medical news plus CME for physicians 2009

  • Alternatively, these results may reflect increased familiality/heritability of the negative class, the presence of multiple 1q schizophrenia risk genes, or a pleiotropic 1q risk locus or loci, with stronger genotype-phenotype correlation with negative/deficit symptoms.

    Archives of General Psychiatry current issue 2009

  • The strong familiality of living to extreme ages suggests that human longevity is genetically regulated.

    Elites TV 2009

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