Definition of "informity"
informity
noun
countable and uncountable, plural informities
(obsolete) Absence of regular form; shapelessness.
Quotations
There may I confesse from this narrow time of gestation ensue a minority or smalnesse in the exclusion, but this however inferreth no informity, and it still receiveth the name of a naturall and legitimate birth; whereas if we affirme a totall informity, it cannot admit so forward a terme as an Abortment; for that supposeth conformation; and so we must call this constant and intended act of nature, a slip or effluxion, that is an exclusion before conformation; before the birth can bear the name of the parent, or be so much as properly called an Embryon.
1650, Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica: Or, Enquiries Into Very Many Received Tenents
And again, on the other hand, it does not appear, that this informity ought to mislead the discriminating enquirer, for as soon as he has become conscious of it his greatest danger is over, and a knowledge of the parent tongues, the Anglo Saxon and French, ought to afford a sufficient safeguard, and enable him to discern at once, whether a particular form of spelling ought to be attributed to corrupt usage, or a closer approximation to one of the superior tongues.
1862, James Gurnhill, The Breeches Bible: Considered as the Basis for Remarks
The quality or state of being informed.
Quotations
Indeed, it would have been hard to collect material with more possibilities for differing estimates among teachers who for many years had corrected compositions from a much narrower field and therefore of much greater informity both in technical accuracy and in general character.
1912 January, Thurber, “The Hillegas Scale”, in The English Leaflet, number 104, page 6
It is also important to realize that the completion of a dense subset of Hilbert space with respect to the appropriate norm gives different limits depending on whether it is carried out before or after the conversion, hence we will speak of an informity rule, i.e. a certain natural loss of information, which is compatible with broken temporal symmetry.
2011, Erkki J. Brändas, “Time Asymmetry and the Evolution of Physical Laws”, in Philip E. Hoggan, Erkki J. Brändas, Jean Maruani, editor, Advances in the Theory of Quantum Systems in Chemistry and Physics, page 16