English Dictionary |
INCOMPREHENSIBILITY
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Dictionary entry overview: What does incomprehensibility mean?
• INCOMPREHENSIBILITY (noun)
The noun INCOMPREHENSIBILITY has 1 sense:
1. the quality of being incomprehensible
Familiarity information: INCOMPREHENSIBILITY used as a noun is very rare.
Dictionary entry details
Sense 1
Meaning:
The quality of being incomprehensible
Classified under:
Nouns denoting attributes of people and objects
Hypernyms ("incomprehensibility" is a kind of...):
quality (an essential and distinguishing attribute of something or someone)
Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "incomprehensibility"):
inscrutability (the quality of being impossible to investigate)
illegibility (the quality of writing (print or handwriting) that cannot be deciphered)
impenetrability; impenetrableness (incomprehensibility by virtue of being too dense to understand)
noise (incomprehensibility resulting from irrelevant information or meaningless facts or remarks)
opacity; opaqueness (incomprehensibility resulting from obscurity of meaning)
abstruseness; obscureness; obscurity; reconditeness (the quality of being unclear or abstruse and hard to understand)
unintelligibility (incomprehensibility as a consequence of being unintelligible)
unclearness (incomprehensibility as a result of not being clear)
Antonym:
comprehensibility (the quality of comprehensible language or thought)
Derivation:
incomprehensible (difficult to understand)
incomprehensible (incapable of being explained or accounted for)
Context examples
Then he laughed about her, and asked me if I had ever seen such a fierce little piece of incomprehensibility.
(David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens)
Why he had done it, what could have provoked him to such a breach of hospitality, and so suddenly turned all his partial regard for their daughter into actual ill will, was a matter which they were at least as far from divining as Catherine herself; but it did not oppress them by any means so long; and, after a due course of useless conjecture, that it was a strange business, and that he must be a very strange man, grew enough for all their indignation and wonder; though Sarah indeed still indulged in the sweets of incomprehensibility, exclaiming and conjecturing with youthful ardour.
(Northanger Abbey, by Jane Austen)
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