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 incomprehensibleplay

  Familiarity information: INCOMPREHENSIBILITY used as a noun is very rare.


 Dictionary entry details 


INCOMPREHENSIBILITY (noun)


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)



 Learn English with... Proverbs 
"Good eating deserves good drinking." (English proverb)

"A spared body only goes twenty-four hours further that another" (Breton proverb)

"Dog won't eat dog's meat." (Armenian proverb)

"It's not only cooks that wear long knives." (Dutch proverb)



ALSO IN ENGLISH DICTIONARY:


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