英:[ˌɪndɪ'tɜ:mɪnəbl]
美:[ˌɪndɪ'tɜmənəbəl]
英:[ˌɪndɪ'tɜ:mɪnəbl]
美:[ˌɪndɪ'tɜmənəbəl]
in·de·ter·mi·na·ble
In dih tuhr mih n bl
indeterminably (adv.)
词根:indeterminate
adj.indeterminate 不确定的;模糊的;含混的
adv.indeterminably 无法决定地
n.indetermination 不确定;无法断定
不确定;[数]indeterminacy不确定;[数] 不确定性
indeterminabilis(无法定义的)源于15世纪晚期的晚期拉丁语,来自 in-(不)(见 in-(1))和 determinabilis(可定义的),源于 determinare(封闭,限制,设定界限)(见 determine)。相关词汇: Indeterminably(无法确定地)。
The first known use of indeterminable was in the 15th century
indicateverb
to point out or point to
to be a sign of
flowers indicating the arrival of spring
to state or express briefly : suggest
index1 of 2noun
a device (as the pointer on a scale) used to indicate a value or quantity
something that leads a person to a particular fact or conclusion : indication
the price of goods is an index of the economy
an alphabetical list in a printed work that gives with each item listed the page number where it may be found
plural usually indices a mathematical figure, letter, or expression (as the exponent 3 in a3) showing a power or root of another
a symbol ☞ used to direct attention
index2 of 2verb
to provide with an index
index a book
to list in an index
to serve as an index of
index1 of 2noun
a device (as the pointer on a scale) used to indicate a value or quantity
something that leads a person to a particular fact or conclusion : indication
the price of goods is an index of the economy
an alphabetical list in a printed work that gives with each item listed the page number where it may be found
plural usually indices a mathematical figure, letter, or expression (as the exponent 3 in a3) showing a power or root of another
a symbol ☞ used to direct attention
index2 of 2verb
to provide with an index
index a book
to list in an index
to serve as an index of
index1 of 2noun
a device (as the pointer on a scale) used to indicate a value or quantity
something that leads a person to a particular fact or conclusion : indication
the price of goods is an index of the economy
an alphabetical list in a printed work that gives with each item listed the page number where it may be found
plural usually indices a mathematical figure, letter, or expression (as the exponent 3 in a3) showing a power or root of another
a symbol ☞ used to direct attention
index2 of 2verb
to provide with an index
index a book
to list in an index
to serve as an index of
index1 of 2noun
a device (as the pointer on a scale) used to indicate a value or quantity
something that leads a person to a particular fact or conclusion : indication
the price of goods is an index of the economy
an alphabetical list in a printed work that gives with each item listed the page number where it may be found
plural usually indices a mathematical figure, letter, or expression (as the exponent 3 in a3) showing a power or root of another
a symbol ☞ used to direct attention
index2 of 2verb
to provide with an index
index a book
to list in an index
to serve as an index of
indeterminateadjective
not clearly or exactly decided : vague
indeterminate plans
not leading to a clear end or result
indeterminacynoun
the quality or state of being indeterminate
indeterminableadjective
impossible to decide or find out
and indeterminable number of people
indeterminableadjective
impossible to decide or find out
and indeterminable number of people
1 Its terminus ad quem is at present indeterminable.
2 Both conditions, then, being "necessary for producing the effect at all," the portions of it due to each would, according to Mill's argument, be indeterminable.
3 Far worse than the four murders committed was the belief that they would continue week after week to an indeterminable conclusion.
4 It has in common with the salt glaze the close union with the body, so that when fractured the line of demarcation between glaze and body is indeterminable.
5 They found Danny, a slim man, of indeterminable age with a high-pitched, nasal North East accent.
6 The protoplasm of to-day is simply a continuation of the protoplasm of other ages, handed down to us through periods of undefinable and indeterminable time.
7 The possibility of enemy opposition may, therefore, place the selection of one or more physical objectives on an indeterminable basis at the time of the original solution of the problem.
8 They were always visited, to be sure, by the pack, at some unexpected and indeterminable moment, but treated always with a contumelious scorn which was doubtless all that such clumsy tactics merited.
9 The fiscal note attached to the legislation said the overall financial impact was “indeterminable” but would likely lead to a “significant increase in expenditures primarily due to increased incarceration costs.”
10 It seems as if a semi-transparent, rectangular membrane were separating you from a white space of indeterminable extent beyond.
11 It’s full of people of indeterminable ages with plumped, glowy skin and long, extra-thick eyelashes, wearing soft, unwrinkled fabrics and layers of gold chains.
12 I thought, and I believed the thought sincere, that I would not have exchanged places with her who was the mistress of so many peoples, the Empress of such indeterminable Empire.
13 For two days, the rioters murdered between 150 and 780 Jews—exact counts aren’t known—injured 600 to 2,000 others, and raped an indeterminable number of women.
14 In the carriage-house was a faint, indeterminable scent, the ghost of the ghost of fragrance, so elusive that one sensed rather than smelled it, so pervasive and haunting that one could not miss it.
15 For things are related in the following pages about which those who are today esteemed exact thinkers, assert that they will probably remain altogether indeterminable by human intelligence.
16 A woman is something fugitive, irrational, indeterminable, illogical, and contradictory.
17 “This is the first time that there is a solid landmark in Earth history when what would otherwise be indeterminable astronomical parameters are known,” says Whiteside.
18 And now a vast, open plain was seen to be spreading away, away to indeterminable distances; a plain the further limits of which veiled themselves in bister and dull ocher vapors.
19 The scanty beard and small eyes; the flat, fleshy nose; the indeterminable, mask-like expression; all were faithfully reproduced by the celebrated academician—and humorist—who had executed the painting.
20 The error by excess also assumes several forms, but these are indeterminable a priori.
1 无法确定的
3 无法计算的
4 不能确定的
6 难确定的