hevynesse

Etymology
From ; equivalent to (and influenced by).

Noun

 * 1) The quality of having great weight; heaviness.
 * 2) Fulness or sufficiency in quantity; abundance.
 * 3) Great force or intensity.
 * 4) Great importance or meaning.
 * 5) The quality of being difficult to bear or accomplish; burdensomeness.
 * 6) Slowness or sluggishness of movement.
 * 7) A lack of vitality due to factors such as fatigue, age, disease or conscience.
 * 8)  The vice of sloth or idleness.
 * 9) Woe, sorrow, grief; anxiety, unease.
 * 10) * c. 1368,, , as recorded c. 1440–1450 in Bodleian Library MS. Fairfax 16, folio 130r:
 * "enm"

- Defaulte of slepe and hevynesse / Hath [slayne] my spirite of quyknesse / That I haue loste al lustyhede


 * 1) Vexation, annoyance; hostility.
 * 2)  Gravity, seriousness
 * 3) A misfortune or grievance.
 * 4)  Offensiveness, oppressiveness.
 * 5)  Depth, lowness of pitch.
 * 6)  Inclemency.