imponderably

imponderably
adverb see imponderable

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • imponderably — See imponderability. * * * …   Universalium

  • imponderably — adv. immeasurably, inestimably …   English contemporary dictionary

  • imponderably — im·ponderably …   English syllables

  • imponderably — adverb see imponderable I * * * imponˈderably adverb • • • Main Entry: ↑imponderable …   Useful english dictionary

  • imponderable — adjective Etymology: Medieval Latin imponderabilis, from Latin in + Late Latin ponderabilis ponderable Date: 1794 not ponderable ; incapable of being weighed or evaluated with exactness < the imponderable beauties of Beethoven s…sonatas Cecelia… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Tianjin University — Infobox University name = Tianjin University motto = Seeking Truth from Facts 实事求是 established = October 2, 1895 type = Public president = Gong Ke (龚克) city = Tianjin country = PRC undergrad = 15,000 postgrad = 5,000 faculty = 4,700 website =… …   Wikipedia

  • Isogram — For the term in geography and cartography, see contour line. An isogram (also known as a nonpattern word ) is a logological term for a word or phrase without a repeating letter. It is also used by some to mean a word or phrase in which each… …   Wikipedia

  • imponderable — imponderability, imponderableness, n. imponderably, adv. /im pon deuhr euh beuhl/, adj. 1. not ponderable; that cannot be precisely determined, measured, or evaluated. n. 2. an imponderable thing, force, agency, etc. [1785 95; < ML imponderabilis …   Universalium

  • imponderable — (adj.) 1794, weightless, from assimilated form of IN (Cf. in ) (1) not, opposite of + ponderable (see PONDER (Cf. ponder)). Figurative use, unthinkable, from 1814. Related: Imponderably. As a noun, by 1842 …   Etymology dictionary

  • imponderable — adjective 1》 difficult or impossible to estimate or assess. 2》 archaic very light. noun an imponderable factor. Derivatives imponderability bɪlɪti noun imponderably adverb …   English new terms dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”