List of antonyms from "incomer" to antonyms from "inconsolable"


Discover our 267 antonyms available for the terms "inconsistency, inconsolable, incommensurable, inconclusive, inconsiderate" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « incommensurable »

  • As in incommensurate : adj not proportional
  • As in different : adj dissimilar, unlike
  • As in diverse : adj different; various
Example sentences :
  • But that the Diagony is incommensurable unto the side it is the 116 p x.
  • Extract from : « The Way To Geometry » by Peter Ramus
  • Life introduces something indeterminate and incommensurable.
  • Extract from : « Under the Maples » by John Burroughs
  • Hats are, in their physical aspects, incommensurable with wheat.
  • Extract from : « The Value of Money » by Benjamin M. Anderson, Jr.
  • This includes the incommensurable case, but this case may be omitted.
  • Extract from : « The Teaching of Geometry » by David Eugene Smith
  • His ideal is the extraordinary, the gigantic, the overwhelming, the incommensurable.
  • Extract from : « French Classics » by William Cleaver Wilkinson
  • The incommensurable of Pythagoras and the paradoxes of Zeno present the "no thoroughfares" of ancient mathematical thought.
  • Extract from : « Creative Intelligence » by John Dewey, Addison W. Moore, Harold Chapman Brown, George H. Mead, Boyd H. Bode, Henry Waldgrave, Stuart James, Hayden Tufts, Horace M. Kallen
  • It is an incommensurable number which to five decimal places is equal to 2.71828.
  • Extract from : « The New Gresham Encyclopedia » by Various
  • The new gods thus far were not incommensurable with the old ones.
  • Extract from : « The Religion of Numa » by Jesse Benedict Carter
  • The two things are not merely different, they are incommensurable.
  • Extract from : « Considerations on Representative Government » by John Stuart Mill
  • Lastly, the Pythagoreans discovered the existence of incommensurable lines, or of irrationals.
  • Extract from : « Archimedes » by Thomas Little Heath