Incomprehensibleness
11Acatalepsy — (from the Greek α̉ , privative, and καταλαμβάνειν, to seize), in philosophy, is incomprehensibleness, or the impossibility of comprehending or conceiving a thing. The Pyrrhonians and Skeptics, and even Plato s Academy asserted an absolute… …
12incomprehensible — incomprehensibility, incomprehensibleness, n. incomprehensibly, adv. /in kom pri hen seuh beuhl, in kom /, adj. 1. impossible to understand or comprehend; unintelligible. 2. Archaic. limitless; not limited or capable of being limited. [1300 50;… …
13inarticulateness — n. lack of clearness, indistinctness; incomprehensibleness; inability to express oneself in words; speechlessness (due to rage or surprise) …
14unfathomability — n. state of being unfathomable; incomprehensibleness; immeasurableness …
15incomprehensible — adjective not able to be understood. Derivatives incomprehensibility noun incomprehensibleness noun incomprehensibly adverb incomprehension noun …
16incomprehensibility — n. 1. Inconceivableness, incomprehensibleness, inexhaustibleness, unfathomableness, unimaginable character. 2. Unthinkableness, incogitability, unintelligibility, inability to be understood …
17inconceivableness — n. Incomprehensibleness, incomprehensibility (which see) …
18inscrutableness — n. Inscrutability, impenetrability, incomprehensibility, incomprehensibleness, unfathomableness, mysteriousness, mystery, inexplicability, unsearchableness …
19abyss — n 1. void, gulf, gap, bottomless pit, abysm, yawning abyss; cavity, hole, pit, depth, shaft; gorge, canyon, ravine, chasm; cleft, fissure, crevice, crevasse; the deep, the depths, ocean depths, bottomless depths. 2. profundity, profoundness,… …
20heaviness — n 1. heft, heftiness, weight, weightiness, ponderousness, gravity; size, volume, mass, substance, bulk, bulkiness, largeness, bigness, amplitude. 2. turbulence, tempestuousness, storminess, wildness, roughness. 3. graveness, seriousness,… …