单词 | incommensurable |
释义 | incommensurableadj.n. A. adj. 1. a. Mathematics. Not commensurable; having no common measure (integral or fractional). Said of two or more quantities or magnitudes, or of one quantity or magnitude in relation to another (const. with, †to); also sometimes absol. = incommensurable with ordinary or ‘rational’ quantities, as the natural numbers; the same as irrational or surd (but not usually said, like these, of roots). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [adjective] > describing relationships between quantities > incommensurable incommensurable?a1560 heterogeneous1656 incommensuratea1687 ?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) iii. viii. sig. R j v These lines for that they are some of them incommensurable, can not exactly be expressed, saue only in surde numbers. 1570 H. Billingsley tr. Euclid Elements Geom. x. f. 229 Incommensurable magnitudes are such, which no one common measure doth measure. a1688 R. Cudworth Treat. Eternal & Immutable Morality (1731) iv. v. 271 That the Diameter of every Square is Incommensurable with the Sides. 1723 J. Clarke tr. Rohault's Syst. Nat. Philos. I. i. ix. 33 Suppose ABCD to be a Square, it may be geometrically demonstrated, that the Side AB, is incommensurable to the Diagonal AC. 1837 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe I. iii. 332 The rules as to surd roots are referrible to incommensurable magnitudes. 1900 N.E.D. at Incommensurable Mod. The ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (denoted by π) is an incommensurable quantity. b. (in Arithmetic): Having no (integral) common measure except unity; prime to one another. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [adjective] > describing relationships between quantities > other incommensurable1557 minor1571 reflexive1903 biunique1941 dyadic1962 1557 R. Record Whetstone of Witte sig. Bi If thei haue no suche common diuisor, then are thei called incommensurable, as 18 and 25. 1806 C. Hutton Course Math. (ed. 5) I. 53 If it happen that the common measure thus found is 1; then the numbers are said to be incommensurable, or not having any common measure. 2. a. gen. Having no common standard of measurement; not comparable in respect of magnitude or value. ΚΠ 1660 R. Coke Justice Vindicated 12 Whether such things so apprehended by the Senses, be pleasant, profitable, just or unjust..commensurable, or incommensurable. 1664 H. More Apol. in Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity 539 Will not this Position prove as incommensurable to humane affairs and be laden with as great inconveniences? 1796 E. Burke Let. to Noble Lord 6 Between them and money there is no common measurer. Such services, if done by abler men than I am, are, quantities incommensurable. 1845 T. De Quincey On Temperance Movement in Tait's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 663/2 The two states are incommensurable on any plan of direct comparison. 1881 B. F. Westcott & F. J. A. Hort New Test. in Orig. Greek II. Introd. ii. 46 The rival probabilities represented by relative number of attesting documents must be treated as incommensurable. b. spec. Not worthy to be measured with; not coming up to the standard of measurement of (something); utterly disproportioned to. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > disorder > disharmony or incongruity > unsuitability or inappropriateness > [adjective] > disproportionate unproportioneda1500 unproportionate1535 misproportioned1552 disproportionate1555 disproportionated1572 unproportionable1576 improportionate1581 disproportionable1589 disproportioned1597 improportionable1601 disproportional1609 asymmetral1615 unproportional1628 overproportionated1647 improportioned1656 improportionala1662 over-proportioned1662 overproportionate1672 uncommensurate1676 incommensurate1684 incommensurable1820 1820 S. Turner Hist. Anglo-Saxons (ed. 3) I. iii. iv. 303 The forces of either were so incommensurable with the numbers and bravery of the people they attacked. 1856 P. E. Dove Logic Christian Faith vi. §2. 340 His past life is incommensurable with infinity. 1892 R. L. Stevenson & L. Osbourne Wrecker x. 173 Solutions, which I still dismissed as incommensurable with the facts. B. n. An incommensurable quantity, etc.: usually in plural. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [noun] > relationship between quantities > incommensurable incommensurability1570 asymmetrya1652 incommensurableness1681 incommensurable1741 the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > capability of calculation > instance of incommensurable1741 1741 I. Watts Improvem. Mind i. i. 8 Puzzling Enquiries concerning..Incommensurables. 1812 Edinb. Rev. 20 94 Omitting to introduce any thing concerning the nature of incommensurables. 1845 H. Rogers Ess. I. iii. 125 Melancthon was ‘cutting and contriving’ to perform impossibilities, to find a common measure of incommensurables. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online September 2020). < adj.n.1557 |
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