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inchoate
[in-koh-it, -eyt, in-koh-eyt]
adjective
not yet completed or fully developed; rudimentary.
just begun; incipient.
not organized; lacking order.
an inchoate mass of ideas on the subject.
inchoate
/ ɪˈəʊəɪ /
adjective
just beginning; incipient
undeveloped; immature; rudimentary
(of a legal document, promissory note, etc) in an uncompleted state; not yet made specific or valid
verb
to begin
Other Word Forms
- inchoately adverb
- inchoateness noun
- ˈDzٱԱ noun
- ˌԳˈپDz noun
- ˈDzٱ adverb
- inchoative adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of inchoate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of inchoate1
Example Sentences
But the definition is so inchoate that decisions about whether something rates as fair use are typically done by judges on a case-by-case basis.
Calling it blood money, he uses it only to fund his inchoate plan to crush the Squid Game.
Back then, it was a handful of female video game developers and critics who were presented to largely male crowds online as targets for relentless, inchoate abuse.
But although his methodology was questioned, he opened the door to a generation of social scientists for the analysis of often subjective and inchoate aspects of human emotion and behavior.
Another problem with the analysis is that the candidates’ proposals are inchoate — as the committee acknowledges.
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