unprevisible
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From un- + previsible.
Adjective
[edit]unprevisible (comparative more unprevisible, superlative most unprevisible)
- (very rare) Not previsible; unforeseeable, unpredictable.
- Synonym: imprevisible
- 1911, J[ohn] W[illiam] Mackail, “The Progress of Poetry”, in Lectures on Poetry, London […]: Longmans, Green and Co., page 330:
- For the flowering and fruitage, for the actual creation of a new and great poetry, it awaits, as it did before Homer, before Virgil, before Milton, the incalculable and unprevisible individual genius.
- 1932, Samuel Beckett, Dream of Fair to Middling Women, London, Paris: Calder Publications, published 1993, →ISBN, page 139:
- And I think of the ultimately unprevisible atom threatening to come asunder, the left wing of the atom plotting without ceasing to spit in the eye of the physical statistician and commit a most copious offence of nuisance on his cenotaphs of indivisibility.