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incontinent

[ UK /ɪnkˈɒntɪnənt/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈkɑntənənt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not having control over urination and defecation

How To Use incontinent In A Sentence

  • Like a lacertine Vicar of Bray, he varies incontinently from buff to blue, and from blue back to orange again, under stress of circumstances. Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
  • He became incontinent and lost control of his bowels.
  • She is immobile, has limited head and trunk control and is doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • He became wheelchair-bound and doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are usually suffering from some form of dementia, have had strokes, heart attacks, or are doubly incontinent.
  • The Earle of Pancalier aduertised hereof, began incontinently to feele a certaine remorse of conscience, which inwardly gript hym so nere, as he endured a torment lyke to very death. The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1
  • Than the king kest abak his handis betwix the tindis of this hart, to haif savit him fra the strak thairof; and the haly croce slaid, incontinent, in his handis. Chronicles of the Canongate
  • He was totally incontinent and she was tidying his bed. Times, Sunday Times
  • He became wheelchair-bound and doubly incontinent. Times, Sunday Times
  • Biology: The lining of the rectum is very thin and a ready route for disease and easy to rupture during the vigorous thrusting of anal sex — easy to contaminate your blood with fecal matter – the sphincter muscle of the anus can be damaged by too many intrusions making one incontinent – hemorrhoids and anal sex are surely incompatible. The Volokh Conspiracy » Sex Education, Dirty Words, and the Due Process Clause
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