noun Incapability of being measured; immeasurableness.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
noun The quality of being immeasurable; immensurability.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
noun immeasurableness
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word immeasurability.
Examples
But we’ve seen in books like Patrick Lencioni’s “The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (And Their Employees)” that immeasurability is a key destroyer of engagement.
But we’ve seen in books like Patrick Lencioni’s “The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (And Their Employees)” that immeasurability is a key destroyer of engagement.
Underlying the polem - ics was a craving for spontaneity, sincerity, and warm sensibility rather than cold rationality, the concrete rather than the abstract, and a recognition of the in - comparability and immeasurability of things.
Against such a background of immeasurability in space, of infinity in time, with such a scale of magnitude in the problems of tomorrow, we should not worry too much about the present.
And if we have a saving conscience as to the immeasurability of home by money standards we are not to be tempted by the veriest bargain of a house that does not nearly represent our ideals.
Friend laughs with friend, the mother fondles her child, one cow sidles up to another and licks its body, and the immeasurability behind these comes direct to my mind with a shock which almost savours of pain.
None were humbler than the foremost scientists about the narrowness of the field of knowledge, as compared with the immeasurability of the field of faith.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.