English
Etymology
From robust + -ness.
Noun
robustness (countable and uncountable, plural robustnesses)
- The quality of being robust.
1950 November, “Mixed-Traffic Diesel-Electric Locomotives for Ireland”, in Railway Magazine, page 780:Robustness was considered to be an essential feature because of the comparatively high starting effort and the generally rough work for which the locomotives are to be used.
1960 March, “Talking of Trains: The Slough derailment”, in Trains Illustrated, page 132:The Inspecting Officer draws attention to the remarkable way in which the train held together after the final derailment; this was due in no small measure to the robustness of the buckeye couplings fitted to the coaches.
Derived terms
Translations
quality of being robust
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 魯棒性 / 鲁棒性 (zh) (lǔbàngxìng), 健壯性 / 健壮性 (jiànzhuàngxìng), 穩健性 / 稳健性 (wěnjiànxìng), 強健性 / 强健性 (qiángjiànxìng)
- Dutch: robuustheid f
- Finnish: rotevuus
- French: robustesse (fr) f
- Galician: robusteza f
- German: Robustheit (de) f
- Irish: urrúntacht f
- Italian: robustezza (it) f
- Japanese: 頑健性 (がんけんせい, gankensei), 頑強性 (がんきょうせい, gankyōsei), ロバストネス (robasutonesu)
- Kazakh: беріктік (berıktık), тұрақтылық (tūraqtylyq), робастылық (robastylyq)
- Korean: 강건성(剛健性) (ganggeonseong)
- Polish: odporność (pl) f, solidność (pl) f, krzepkość (pl) f
- Portuguese: robustez (pt) f
- Romanian: robustețe (ro) f, soliditate (ro), vânjoșie f
- Russian: прочность (ru) f (pročnostʹ), робастность (ru) f (robastnostʹ)
- Turkish: dayanıklılık (tr), sağlamlık (tr)
- Vietnamese: bền vững (vi) (𥑃𠊡)
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Anagrams