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Definition of incapable adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

incapable

adjective
 
/ɪnˈkeɪpəbl/
 
/ɪnˈkeɪpəbl/
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  1. not able to do something
    • incapable of something incapable of speech
    • incapable of doing something The children seem to be totally incapable of working by themselves.
    Extra Examples
    • He was apparently physically incapable of lowering his voice.
    • She was constitutionally incapable of bad temper.
    • Exhaustion had made him incapable of thinking clearly.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • appear
    • be
    • feel
    adverb
    • absolutely
    • completely
    • quite
    preposition
    • of
    See full entry
  2. not able to control yourself or your affairs; not able to do anything well
    • If people keep telling you you're incapable, you begin to lose confidence in yourself.
    • He was found lying in the road, drunk and incapable.
    • This type of arrangement remains valid even if you become mentally incapable.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • appear
    • be
    • feel
    adverb
    • absolutely
    • completely
    • quite
    preposition
    • of
    See full entry
  3. opposite capable
    Word Originlate 16th cent.: from French, or from late Latin incapabilis, from in- ‘not’ + capabilis (from Latin capere ‘take or hold’).
See incapable in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee incapable in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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