Skip to main content

incompletely

/in-kuhm-pleet/US // ˌɪn kəmˈplit //UK // (ˌɪnkəmˈpliːt) //

不完全,不完全的,不完全是,不完整的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not complete; lacking some part.
    • : Football. not completed; not caught by a receiver.
    • : Engineering. noting a truss the panel points of which are not entirely connected so as to form a system of triangles.Compare complete, redundant.
    • : Logic, Philosophy. meaningful only in a specific context. such that there is at least one true proposition that is not deducible from the set.Compare complete.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Education. a temporary grade indicating that a student has not fulfilled one or more of the essential requirements for a course: If I don't hand in my term paper for last semester's English course, the professor is going to change my incomplete to an F.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Adding to the complexity is a dense, incomplete web of regulations around which kinds of products can be sold and promoted.

  • Ikhrata said the audit contains “flawed conclusions,” “incomplete information” and a biased “accusational tone.”

  • As reopened businesses require some parents to return to work, they’re left to make decisions based on competing priorities and incomplete information.

  • Another third of applications submitted to MTS were deemed incomplete.

  • These tools are siloed and provide an incomplete view of the consumer journey and behavior.

  • In the meantime, most of the detailed studies are incomplete in one way or another.

  • I speak here to warn people that the facts presented in the opera are incomplete and distorted.

  • Was what happened to the Central Park Five completely wrong, or simply incomplete?

  • As a portrait of childhood in America, it is incomplete enough to be irresponsible.

  • They gave her the forms instead, which she carries with her incomplete.

  • An octave coupler without such extension is incomplete and is no more honest than a stop which only goes down to Tenor C.

  • He said it because his sentence sounded otherwise suspiciously incomplete.

  • Here ends Chaucer's portion of the translation, in the middle of an incomplete sentence, without any verb.

  • This sentence is incomplete; the translator has missed the line—'Et qu'ele a sa vie perdue.'

  • Every contract on a negotiable note is incomplete and revocable until its delivery.