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词汇 unmeasurable
释义

Definition of unmeasurable in English:

unmeasurable

adjective ʌnˈmɛʒ(ə)rəb(ə)lˌənˈmɛʒ(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • Not able to be measured objectively.

    不可测量的;无法计量的

    the unmeasurable qualities of a scientist

    科学家不可估量的品质。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Today, two centuries later, the struggle for precision continues as meteorologists devise ever more exacting techniques to measure quantities either so teeny or so gigantic that they had once been judged unmeasurable.
    • What have the Danes ever done for me, I pondered on the way to the pub, apart from lend me a Scandic name and an unmeasurable quantity of Viking blood?
    • Ashley was everything Rene was not; an honor student with seemingly unmeasurable athletic and musical talent, as well as a despicable, eternally cheerful disposition.
    • The effects of regulations such as these are both unpredictable and unmeasurable.
    • Our return percentages are so low they're almost 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.
    • Barbara Sherwood said: ‘My parents, who are in their 80s, are going through an unmeasurable degree of distress.’
    • This goal may be relatively specific, but it's completely unmeasurable and not time-limited.
    • Austrians can offer an alternative approach that does not depend on having to define or measure what is conceptually indefinable or unmeasurable.
    • Now that pain is touted as the ‘fifth vital sign,’ (an unmeasurable vital sign, I might add) doctors are reluctant to seem insensitive, even though there may be plenty of signs that all is not on the up and up with the patient.
    • One had to feel sorry for coach Joe Byrne; the man just lives for basketball, the time and commitment he has for the game is unmeasurable.
    • But ahead lay a quagmire, a demoralising contest in which progress was unmeasurable and victory unattainable.
    • This was unmeasurable two decades ago (scientific instruments simply were not that accurate) and highly controversial until recent review and empirical confirmation.
    • Things given secretly can impact in ways 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).
    • The judge attempted to do his best on exiguous material to measure the unmeasurable and in the result awarded compensation for the uncompensatable.
    • 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.
    • Their faith in technology's ability to measure the previously unmeasurable, Webster said, meant that ‘a lot of false expectations were set up.’
    • 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.
    • This is especially true for pain and suffering awards, which are supposed to measure something that everyone admits is unmeasurable.

Derivatives

  • unmeasurably

  • adverb
    • Ok, forget the film version with Leo Di Caprio, the book is unmeasurably cool, a blow-by-blow account of a drug addicted adolescence in late 1960's Manhattan by a guy who CAN write.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Statistical analyses that took several hours in 1990 (I used to leave my computer running overnight) now take unmeasurably small fractions of a second.
      • Bit of a riddle, that - unmeasurable corruption that makes us ‘take climate change (unmeasurably) more seriously.’
      • What has happened to this unmeasurably huge memory bank, the aural repertoire of 100s of different peoples?
      • They came up with a mask that means the cost is almost unmeasurably low.

Definition of unmeasurable in US English:

unmeasurable

adjectiveˌənˈmeZH(ə)rəb(ə)lˌənˈmɛʒ(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • Not able to be measured objectively.

    不可测量的;无法计量的

    the unmeasurable qualities of a scientist

    科学家不可估量的品质。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Our return percentages are so low they're almost unmeasurable.
    • Austrians can offer an alternative approach that does not depend on having to define or measure what is conceptually indefinable or unmeasurable.
    • This goal may be relatively specific, but it's completely unmeasurable and not time-limited.
    • Ashley was everything Rene was not; an honor student with seemingly unmeasurable athletic and musical talent, as well as a despicable, eternally cheerful disposition.
    • Today, two centuries later, the struggle for precision continues as meteorologists devise ever more exacting techniques to measure quantities either so teeny or so gigantic that they had once been judged unmeasurable.
    • This is especially true for pain and suffering awards, which are supposed to measure something that everyone admits is unmeasurable.
    • The judge attempted to do his best on exiguous material to measure the unmeasurable and in the result awarded compensation for the uncompensatable.
    • What have the Danes ever done for me, I pondered on the way to the pub, apart from lend me a Scandic name and an unmeasurable quantity of Viking blood?
    • This was unmeasurable two decades ago (scientific instruments simply were not that accurate) and highly controversial until recent review and empirical confirmation.
    • 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.
    • 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.
    • Now that pain is touted as the ‘fifth vital sign,’ (an unmeasurable vital sign, I might add) doctors are reluctant to seem insensitive, even though there may be plenty of signs that all is not on the up and up with the patient.
    • 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).
    • One had to feel sorry for coach Joe Byrne; the man just lives for basketball, the time and commitment he has for the game is unmeasurable.
    • But ahead lay a quagmire, a demoralising contest in which progress was unmeasurable and victory unattainable.
    • Things given secretly can impact in ways unmeasurable.
    • 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.
    • Their faith in technology's ability to measure the previously unmeasurable, Webster said, meant that ‘a lot of false expectations were set up.’
    • Barbara Sherwood said: ‘My parents, who are in their 80s, are going through an unmeasurable degree of distress.’
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