[
UK
/ɪnsˈaɪsɪvnəs/
]
NOUN
- keenness and forcefulness of thought or expression or intellect
How To Use incisiveness In A Sentence
- Other views have lacked the incisiveness and the firmness of conviction that make his analysis a classic in the history of rate regulation.
- Conclusion The comprehensive community-based NCD control and prevention is an optimal incisiveness for the medicine and public health initiative.
- Michael also reviewed many books for the journal, combining speed of turnaround, with incisiveness and a broad understanding of transport history with which to contextualise the book reviewed.
- But may the shuttle back row chair be this kind of characteristic display incisiveness.
- Perusing this delicate yet powerful little book, we can't help but admire the shapeliness, the eloquence, the stylishness, and the incisiveness of the essay it contains.
- The problem for a portrait painter is the incisiveness of your observation - how deeply you choose to look into your subject.
- The awkward nature in which he attempted to execute the action seemed to encapsulate his lack of incisiveness, in stark contrast to the intelligence and skill of his strike partner Suarez.
- There was that about Count Giraldi, a diamantine brilliancy, a something hard and crystalline, a positiveness, an incisiveness of view and reflection, which on first acquaintance decided me not to take him into my confidence. The Fool Errant
- Conclusion The comprehensive community-based NCD control and prevention is an optimal incisiveness for the medicine and public health initiative.
- The problem for a portrait painter is the incisiveness of your observation - how deeply you choose to look into your subject.