Get Free Checker

How To Use Innumerate In A Sentence

  • There are no contemporary estimates of how rapidly and how far literacy spread; nor is it possible for us to quantify it with the data provided by largely innumerate contemporaries.
  • This is like protesting the menorah because it excludes the innumerate.
  • Now I know they are staffed by a load of hopeless innumerates, but come on guys…
  • He used it to sum up the persuasive power of authoritatively made numeric presentations to a largely innumerate public.
  • In the past I have found I was too short to be a police officer, too poor to be an international playboy, too innumerate to be an aerospace engineer, too smart to be an elected official.
Master English with Ease
Translate words instantly and build your vocabulary every day.
Boost Your
Learning
Master English with Ease
  • Even little innumerate old me spotted a discrepancy here.
  • Like millions of Venezuelans, in the midst of spurting oil wealth she was left illiterate and innumerate.
  • Since most of us are innumerate, the arguments may seem dazzling.
  • `But even I, or even me -- I wasn't much to write home about in English either -- even poor old innumerate me, can do that bit of addition. PROSPECT HILL
  • And I should perhaps add that to this day I am practically innumerate.
  • Professionals often use verbal quantifiers such as ‘rarely’ and ‘unlikely’ to describe risk because they believe the public is innumerate.
  • The big dirty secret about journalists is that most are innumerate.
  • But this is a form of social injustice, for innumerate and illiterate workers are locked into a low-wage future.
  • But if you're innumerate, people seem to think that's OK.
  • Only now - after aid - is it possible for them to seriously discuss trade; you can't trade when your people are illiterate, innumerate, diseased and starving.
  • During the 1980s, he discovered that many of the young workers in his manufacturing firms were functionally illiterate and innumerate.
  • Unfortunately, we physicians are largely innumerate - even those of us who hold editorial positions at influential medical journals.
  • Even the most innumerate family lawyer will need to know the principles, at least, on which child maintenance is to be assessed.
  • One of the rarely admitted secrets about journalists is that many of us are functional ‘innumerates’ - another way of saying ‘mathematically illiterate.’
  • We need to stop being an innumerate country, and start to get on board the fact that it is perfectly possible for everybody to understand the basics of statistics.
  • So nice, compassionate, slightly innumerate people who genuinely want to help the homeless could conceivably have been taken in.
  • It would rather let them go out into the world illiterate or innumerate rather than suffer the supposed indignity of being told how to do something properly.
  • I wanted to find out just how stupid, reckless or hopelessly innumerate they could be.
  • Academics at the University of London warned that if this is not addressed, we could create an innumerate generation.
  • It's a part of the literacy/numeracy problem - if someone is innumerate there's no point trying to explain significance as a percentage etc.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):