[
UK
/ʌnmˈɛʒəɹəbəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
impossible to measure
unmeasurable reaches of outer space
immeasurable suffering
How To Use unmeasurable In A Sentence
- Their faith in technology's ability to measure the previously unmeasurable, Webster said, meant that ‘a lot of false expectations were set up.’
- He was, indeed, as Dr. Lavendar said, a man of humble mind; and yet with his humbleness was a serene certainty would have been impossible to John Fenn, who measured every man's chance of salvation by his own theological yardstick, or even to Dr. Lavendar, who thought salvation unmeasurable. The Voice
- But ahead lay a quagmire, a demoralising contest in which progress was unmeasurable and victory unattainable.
- Austrians can offer an alternative approach that does not depend on having to define or measure what is conceptually indefinable or unmeasurable.
- Fourth, precise values often do not exist because the vehicle is operated in a noisy and widely unmeasurable environment, and only incomplete data are available (for example, about properties of the road surface).
- This is especially true for pain and suffering awards, which are supposed to measure something that everyone admits is unmeasurable.
- Obviously no conventional rules apply; no ordinary yardstick can be used to measure the unmeasurable, no mundane radar screen suffices to keep track of his myriad tangents of sound and silence.
- This has to be a response to the importance placed on visitor statistics as the crucial indicator of success, and of the contingencies of government funding, which demand measurable outputs for unmeasurable experiences.
- The effects of regulations such as these are both unpredictable and unmeasurable.
- Down the same street, the extent of how I felt when a rival school pushed one of my friends up against a wall and kicked her in the back was unmeasurable.