0 the quality of expressing a lot of admiration or praise for someone, often too much, in a way that does not sound sincere:
His writing gives praise without fulsomeness.
My appreciation was so heartfelt that it was difficult to avoid fulsomeness.
They weren't in the habit of quite such cloying fulsomeness, and their praise tended to have a sardonic edge to it.
In the fulsomeness of their flattery, they hope to show that they recognize merit wherever it may be found.
This biography is saved from fulsomeness by the rigour of the academic research.
That has been said again recently in a radio broadcast, and it is being said with increasing fulsomeness.
Not at all—some arguments are eternally refreshing, because they represent in this remarkable place the fulsomeness of the challenge and the response.
Oral cultures encourage fluency, fulsomeness, volubility.