INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: NOUN
- One who lacks mental or physical capacity, either general or special.
- One who is morally or mentally weak or inefficient; an imbecile; a simpleton.
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INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: ADJECTIVE
- Not meeting requirements
- (followed by `of') not having the temperament or inclination for
- Lacking the necessary skill or knowledge etc.
- Lacking the necessary ability, capacity, or power.
- Unable to perform adequately; incompetent.
- Not susceptible to action or treatment.
- Not meeting the physical and mental requirements imposed by law for the performance of a particular task.
- Not meeting the requirements necessary for proper legal functioning.
- Lacking in ability or qualification for the purpose or end in view; not large enough to contain or hold; deficient in physical strength, mental or moral power, etc.; not capable
- Not capable of being brought to do or perform, because morally strong or well disposed; -- used with reference to some evil.
- Not in a state to receive; not receptive; not susceptible; not able to admit
- Unqualified or disqualified, in a legal sense
- As a term of disgrace, sometimes annexed to a sentence when an officer has been cashiered and rendered incapable of serving his country.
- Not capable (of doing something); unable.
- Not being susceptible to or admitting of something (usually followed by `of')
- (followed by `of') lacking capacity or ability
- Not susceptible to
- Not susceptible to or admitting of.
- Not susceptible.
INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not capable.
- Lacking sufficient capacity or capaciousness; insufficient, unfit, or unqualified: in this and the succeeding uses commonly followed by of.
- Not capable of receiving or admitting; not susceptible: as, his lot is incapable of amelioration.
- Not capable of understanding or comprehending; wanting appreciation; unconscious.
- Synonyms Incapable, Unable. Incapable properly denotes a want of passive power, the power of receiving, and is applicable particularly to the mind, or said of something inanimate: as, a body once dead is incapable of restoration to life. The word often applies to moral inability: as, he is quite incapable of doing a thing so base; or otherwise it approaches essentially the more active meanings of unable. Unable denotes the want of active power or power of performing, being applicable to the body or to the mind: we could not say that Achilles was unable to be wounded, but we could say that Achilles was incapable of a wound. In law capable and incapable refer more frequently to legal qualification, able and unable to physical facility or hindrance: as, a man may not be legally incapable of doing an act, yet from circumstances be practically unable to do it.
- Not capable legally; unqualified; disqualified by law; wanting legal warrant or capacity.
- Not susceptible; insusceptible: as, unsusceptible of stain.
INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: RELATED WORDS
- Unfit, Incapacitated, Useless, Powerless, Ineffective, Inept, Impotent, Capable, Unequal to, Insusceptible, Unable, Unsusceptible, Unqualified, Inadequate, Incompetent
- Delusory, Unaesthetic, Inefficacious, Delusive, Assailable, Invulnerable, Impervious, Unsuasible, Unpersuadable, Insusceptible, Vaccinated, Immunized, Resistant, Immune, Incapable
INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unfit, Incapacitated, Useless, Powerless, Ineffective, Inept, Impotent, Capable, Unequal to, Insusceptible, Unable, Unsusceptible, Unqualified, Inadequate, Incompetent
- Delusory, Unaesthetic, Inefficacious, Delusive, Assailable, Invulnerable, Impervious, Unsuasible, Unpersuadable, Insusceptible, Vaccinated, Immunized, Resistant, Immune, Incapable
INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- If our prisons are incapable of acting Mr.
- Incapable of knowing it is contrary to law.
- Heaven because we are incapable of doing so.
- DBD, which renders them incapable of DNA binding.
- Chapter until an accompanying person for the child or incapable person accompanies the child or incapable person.
- Or that you steal from other countries because they are incapable of governing themselves, or because their governors are incapable of stealing from them.
- He is absolutely incapable of lying, just as he is incapable of getting drunk.
- It appears that the poor student is not so much incapable of learning as he is incapable of learning fast enough to keep up.
- It also finally means being incapable of corruption; not subject to decay or dissolution; incapable of being bribed or morally corrupted.
- Four or more care recipients are incapable of selfpreservation, whether rendered incapable by staff or staff has accepted responsibility for care recipients already incapable.
- These and other stressors include provided the framework pro additional studies designed to decode the impact of insistence on unsusceptible function.
- Unlike presidential systems, parliamentary systems are generally unsusceptible to deadlock situations.
- Social and environmental perceptions of susceptible and unsusceptible hypnotic subjects.
- Enhancing versus suppressive effects of accent on unsusceptible function: implications an eye to immunoprotection and immunopathology.
INCAPABLE vs UNSUSCEPTIBLE: QUESTIONS
- Do Chinese schools produce automatons incapable of critical thought?
- When is a bicycle incapable of providing further assistance?
- How has Heartbreak rendered her almost incapable of Love?
- What medical conditions make you incapable of self-care?
- Are Horrocks Engineers incapable of basic reading comprehension?
- Is utilitarianism structurally incapable of understanding human rights?
- Is Morrissey intellectually incapable of defending his actions?
- Are most people incapable of forming equanimity opinions?
- Are preschoolers incapable of interpreting violent cartoons?
- What actions are incapable of pecuniary estimation?
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