Incommodement to Inconfutable
Incommodement
(In`com*mode"ment) n. The act of incommoded. [Obs.] Cheyne.
Incommodious
(In`com*mo"di*ous) a. [Pref. in- not + commodious: cf. LL. incommodious, L. incommodus,
F. incommode.] Tending to incommode; not commodious; not affording ease or advantage; unsuitable; giving
trouble; inconvenient; annoying; as, an incommodious seat; an incommodious arrangement. In`com*mo"di*ous*ly,
adv. In`com*mo"di*ous*ness, n.
Incommodity
(In`com*mo"di*ty) n.; pl. Incommodities [L. incommoditas: cf. F. incommodité. See Incommodious.]
Inconvenience; trouble; annoyance; disadvantage; encumbrance. [Archaic] Bunyan.
A great incommodity to the body.
Jer. Taylor.
Buried him under a bulk of incommodities.
Hawthorne. Incommunicability
(In`com*mu`ni*ca*bil"i*ty) n. [Cf. F. incommunicabilité.] The quality or state of being
incommunicable, or incapable of being imparted.
Incommunicable
(In`com*mu"ni*ca*ble) a. [L. incommunicabilis: cf. F. incommunicable. See In- not,
and Communicable.] Not communicable; incapable of being communicated, shared, told, or imparted,
to others.
Health and understanding are incommunicable.
Southey.
Those incommunicable relations of the divine love.
South. In`com*mu"ni*ca*ble*ness, n. In`com*mu"ni*ca*bly, adv.
Incommunicated
(In`com*mu"ni*ca`ted) a. Not communicated or imparted. [Obs.] Dr. H. More.
Incommunicating
(In`com*mu"ni*ca`ting), a. Having no communion or intercourse with each other. [Obs.]
Sir M. Hale.
Incommunicative
(In`com*mu"ni*ca*tive) a. Not communicative; not free or apt to impart to others in
conversation; reserved; silent; as, the messenger was incommunicative; hence, not disposed to hold fellowship
or intercourse with others; exclusive.
The Chinese . . . an incommunicative nation.
C. Buchanan. In`com*mu"ni*ca*tive*ly, adv. In`com*mu"ni*ca*tive*ness, n. Lamb.
His usual incommunicativeness.
G. Eliot. Incommutability
(In`com*mu`ta*bil"i*ty) n. [L. incommutabilitas: cf. F. incommutabilité.] The quality or
state of being incommutable.
Incommutable
(In`com*mut"a*ble) a. [L. incommutabilis: cf. F. incommutable. See In- not, and Commutable.]
Not commutable; not capable of being exchanged with, or substituted for, another. Cudworth. In`com*mut"a*ble*ness,
n. In`com*mut"a*bly, adv.
Incompact
(In`com*pact" In`com*pact"ed), a. Not compact; not having the parts firmly united; not solid; incoherent; loose; discrete.
Boyle.