immaterialim‧ma‧te‧ri‧al /ˌɪməˈtɪəriəl◂ $ -ˈtɪr-/ adjective - The difference in our ages was immaterial.
- It is immaterial that his promise is far more valuable than the price he has asked for it.
- Of course you could also be looking for work at home, where the ability to travel to and fro is immaterial.
- Persons, for Descartes, are mental or immaterial thinking substances.
- The content of the mathematics qualification to them is immaterial.
- The general opinion was that comets were immaterial, spiritual portents sent by the Creator as warnings about impending momentous events.
- The nature of the seller's possession is immaterial.
- This may make any savings you anticipate by remortgaging immaterial in the long run.
- Whether one agrees or disagrees with this contention is immaterial.
nounmaterialmaterialismmaterialistmaterialsmaterializationadjectivematerialimmaterialmaterialisticmaterialistadverbmaterialisticallymateriallyverbmaterialize