0 the fact of being too willing or too likely to start a legal case, for example in order to solve a disagreement:
The organization's litigiousness prevents many journalists from writing about it.
He has a reputation for litigiousness.
Rising litigiousness among students means that staff have to keep records of their dealings with students.
Given media coverage of huge compensation payments and increasing litigiousness, claims could rise dramatically.
Because the state refused to recognize litigiousness, it also had to refuse to recognize the lawful existence of litigation masters.
Gowing interprets this extraordinary degree of female litigiousness as evidence of a pent-up desire on the part of women to bring their moral concerns before the public.
It encourages litigiousness and, in the armed forces, that can easily become insubordination.
I am not anxious to foster litigiousness, but it seems to me that this would have been a suitable occasion.
This was another means of reducing the scope of litigiousness between the parties.