-ity
(Latin: suffix used to form abstract nouns expressing act, state, quality, property, or condition corresponding to an adjective)
fissiparity
fluidity
1. The ability of a substance to flow; flowing easily.
2. The quality of being capable of flowing; that quality of certain bodies which makes them impressible to the slightest force, and by which the parts easily move or change their relative position without a separation of the mass; a liquid state; as opposed to solidity.
3. Having or showing a smooth and easy style; graceful: "The extreme fluidity of the situation has made it impossible to predict the outcome."
formality
fragility
fumosity
1. The quality of being full of fumes or vapors.
2. The flatulent quality of various articles of food; the heady quality of wine, etc.
3. Ill-smelling breath; smell of food or drink in the breath.
4. A fumy or vaporous exhalation from anything, a fume; the volatile part given off from a mineral or the like.
futurity
1. The future.
2. The quality or condition of being in or of the future.
3. A future event or possibility.
4. Future generations; posterity.
5. The afterlife: "The promise of eternal life in futurity."
6. A future state or condition; a future event, possibility, or prospect: "His tactfulness remains more of a futurity than a reality."
7. Also called "futurity race"; "horse racing" that is a race, usually for two-year-olds, in which the entrants are selected long before the race is run, sometimes before the birth of the foal.
gelidity
The state of being gelid or very cold as a result of being in a cold environment.
generosity
1. Willingness to give money, help, or time freely.
2. A pleasingly large size or quantity.
3. A generous, kind, or noble act.
gibbosity
1. The condition of having a humpback.
2. A hump or gibbus, as the deformity of Pott's disease.
globosity
Spherical; globular.
grandiloquacity
Characterized by producing lofty or bombastic speech.
grandiosity
gratuity
gravidity
The condition of being pregnant.
helicity
The projection of a particle's spin vector in the direction of its momentum vector, being positive if it points in the same direction, and negative if it points in the opposite direction.
Helicity is in effect the handedness, or chirality, of the spin of a particle.