inconcrete
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Latin inconcretus (“incorporeal”).
Adjective
[edit]inconcrete (comparative more inconcrete, superlative most inconcrete)
- Not concrete.
- 1612 January 4 (Gregorian calendar), Lancelot Andrewes, “A Sermon Preached before the King’s Majesty, at Whitehall, on Wednesday, the Twenty-fifth of December, A.D. MDCXI. being Christmas-Day”, in J[ohn] P[osthumous] W[ilson], editor, Ninety-six Sermons […], volume I, Oxford, Oxfordshire: John Henry Parker, published 1841, →OCLC, page 88:
- For there is not in all the world a more pure, simple, inconcrete procreation than that whereby the mind conceiveth the word within it, by dixit in corde.
Translations
[edit]not concrete
References
[edit]- “inconcrete”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.