Incorporeal
21incorporeal — adjective Etymology: Middle English incorporealle, from Anglo French incorporel, from Latin incorporeus, from in + corporeus corporeal Date: 15th century 1. not corporeal ; having no material body or form 2. of, relating to, or constituting a… …
22incorporeal — incorporeality, n. incorporeally, adv. /in kawr pawr ee euhl, pohr /, adj. 1. not corporeal or material; insubstantial. 2. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of nonmaterial beings. 3. Law. without material existence but existing in… …
23incorporeal — adjective a) Having no material form or physical substance. b) Relating to an asset that does not have a material form; such as a patent. Syn …
24incorporeal — I (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Insubstantial] Syn. spiritual, bodiless, ethereal; see immaterial 2 . 2. [Divine] Syn. celestial, angelic, deistic; see divine 1 , eternal 2 . II (Roget s Thesaurus II) adjective Having no body, form, or substance:… …
25incorporeal — adj. having no material existence; not composed of matter; having no body or form; insubstantialin·cor·po·re·al || ‚ɪnkÉ”r pÉ”rɪəl / kÉ”Ë pÉ”Ër …
26incorporeal — [ˌɪnkɔ: pɔ:rɪəl] adjective 1》 not composed of matter; having no material existence. 2》 Law having no physical existence. Derivatives incorporeality noun incorporeally adverb incorporeity noun …
27incorporeal — a. Immaterial, spiritual, bodiless, supernatural, incorporate …
28incorporeal — adjective formal not existing in any physical form but only as a spirit incorporeally adverb …
29incorporeal — adj insubstantial, asomatous, nonma terial, immaterial, spiritual; unearthly, unworldly, ex tramundane, ultramundane; unreal, chimerical, illusory, ethereal, impalpable, intangible; psychical, spectral, ghostly, supernatural, Inf. spooky, occult …
30incorporeal — in·corporeal …